The diagnostic accuracy of chest Xray screening for silicosis: A systematic review, meta-analysis and modelling study

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Abstract

Objectives

Chest Xray (CXR) is widely used for silicosis diagnosis, despite concerns regarding sensitivity. We investigated the diagnostic accuracy of CXR for silicosis screening compared to computed tomography (CT), high-resolution CT (HRCT) and autopsy, and modelled the relationship between CXR sensitivity and disease severity.

Methods

Medline, Embase, Scopus, and Web of Science databases were searched on 2 nd July 2024 (Prospero registration: CRD42024513830). Meta-analyses were performed by reference standard and at increasing reference test severity cut-offs. The Quality Assessment of Diagnostic Accuracy Studies-2 (QUADAS-2) tool assessed risk of bias. In scenarios of fixed and relative sensitivity, according to disease severity, we estimated missed silicosis cases and the number needed to screen (NNS) in hypothetical populations of low (5%), medium (15%) and high (30%) silicosis prevalence.

Results

Twenty studies included 2156 participants and 1105 silicosis cases. CXR had moderate sensitivity (0.76; 95% confidence interval (CI): 0.63-0.86, I 2 =84%) and high specificity (0.89, 95% CI: 0.77-0.95, I 2 =57%) compared to HRCT in 12 studies, and low sensitivity (0.50, 95% CI: 0.45-0.55, I 2 =0%) and high specificity (0.91, 95% CI: 0.87-0.93, I 2 =20%) compared to autopsy in two studies. CXR sensitivity increased with higher reference test severity cut-offs. Clinically relevant numbers of cases were missed in fixed and relative sensitivity scenarios; increased prevalence and less severe disease resulted in more missed cases and a lower NNS.

Conclusions

Silicosis severity and reference test type both plausibly influence CXR sensitivity. Assuming either fixed or relative sensitivity results in missed silicosis cases. Judicious HRCT screening is likely to improve case detection.

What is already known on this topic

It is widely understood that Chest Xray (CXR) underdiagnoses silicosis compared to more accurate methods, such as high resolution computed tomography (HRCT) and autopsy.

What this study adds

Our systematic review and meta-analysis demonstrated that the sensitivity of CXR was lowest when compared to autopsy (50%), followed by HRCT (76%). This difference may be explained by the increased accuracy of autopsy as a reference test. Another potential explanation for differences between study results could be that – because severe silicosis is more easily diagnosed by CXR – studies with a higher proportion of severe disease recorded higher sensitivity results. Importantly, regardless of whether differences between studies are explained by different reference test modalities or the proportion of severe disease, when modelled among a population of silica-exposed workers, many silicosis cases are missed.

How this study might affect research, practice or policy

This study suggests the careful implementation of HRCT screening for silicosis would improve case detection.

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