# Can pediatric rheumatologists apply available hip scoring systems in daily practice for juvenile idiopathic arthritis?

**Authors:** Kaouther Maatallah, Hanene Lassoued Ferjani, Dorra Ben Nessib, Abir Dghaies, Lobna Kharrat, Fatma Majdoub, Dhia Kaffel, Wafa Hamdi

PMC · DOI: 10.3389/fped.2025.1436200 · Frontiers in Pediatrics · 2025-03-28

## TL;DR

This study evaluates whether pediatric rheumatologists can reliably use existing hip scoring systems in daily practice for juvenile idiopathic arthritis.

## Contribution

The study assesses the reliability and applicability of two hip scoring systems for juvenile idiopathic arthritis in real-world clinical settings.

## Key findings

- The first scoring system showed moderate to good reliability for joint space narrowing, erosion, and growth abnormalities.
- The second scoring system had high ICC for head erosion in one reader but poor agreement in others.
- Training improved agreement in growth disorder assessments but did not fully resolve reliability issues.

## Abstract

Scoring systems for hip involvement in juvenile idiopathic arthritis exist, however, they were not used in daily practice, and their reproducibility was not proven.

We aimed to determine the applicability, reliability, and repeatability of the two scoring systems of the hip in juvenile idiopathic arthritis patients.

Two expert pediatrics rheumatologists analyzed pelvic radiographs from 25 children with JIA hip involvement. We scored the findings according to two previous valid scoring systems (The childhood Arthritis Radiographic Score of the Hip and the newly developed score proposed by the project Health-e-Child) at baseline and after three weeks. We used kappa statistics to rate inter- and intra-observer variability.

The joint space narrowing, erosion, and growth abnormalities had moderate to good reliability when the first score was used. However, the subchondral cysts, malalignment, and sclerosis have poor concordance in the two observers. For the second score, the intraclass correlation coefficient (ICC) was high in only one reader for head erosion (κ = 0.833 vs. κ = 0.308; p < 0.001), enlarged fovea (κ = 0.279 vs. κ = 0.907; p < 0.05), and growth abnormalities (κ = 0.823 vs. κ = 0; p < 0.001; p = 0.5). Therefore, the intra-reader agreement for head femoral measuring and centrum–column–diaphysis angle showed good reliability for only one reader. Training has only improved the observers' agreement with the assessment of growth disorders in the first score. The interpretation agreement was also increased compared to the baseline in the femoral measurements.

The reliability of these tools seemed to be lower without electronic measurements and the pediatric rheumatologists needed more training before applying these scoring in the practice hip monitoring.

NCT05206968 Last Update: 01/12/2022.

## Linked entities

- **Diseases:** juvenile idiopathic arthritis (MONDO:0011429)

## Full-text entities

- **Diseases:** juvenile idiopathic arthritis (MESH:D001171), hip involvement (MESH:D025981), erosion (MESH:D014077), sclerosis (MESH:D012598), subchondral cysts (MESH:D001845), growth abnormalities (MESH:D006130), Arthritis (MESH:D001168), disorders (MESH:D009358)
- **Species:** Homo sapiens (human, species) [taxon 9606]

## Full text

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## Figures

3 figures with captions in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC11986855/full.md

## References

22 references — full list in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC11986855/full.md

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC11986855