Reliability of three scoring systems for assessing quality of anaesthetic induction in horses

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2025

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Wiley
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Villalba‐Díez, M., Benavente‐Sánchez, L., Bustamante, R., Santiago‐Llorente, I., & Villalba‐Orero, M. (2025). Reliability of three scoring systems for assessing quality of anaesthetic induction in horses. Equine Veterinary Journal, evj.70103. https://doi.org/10.1111/evj.70103

Abstract

Background Several induction quality scoring systems (IQSS) have been described to evaluate drugs and risk factors of this anaesthetic period in horses, but no attempts to compare their reliability have been performed. Objectives To elucidate the reliability of three IQSS: the visual analogue scale (VAS), a simple descriptive scale (SDS), and a composite grading scale (CGS) proposed by the authors. Study Design Reliability study. Methods Eight randomly selected video‐recorded anaesthetic inductions from horses that underwent general anaesthesia were evaluated twice by four blinded evaluators with experience in equine anaesthesia, with a 1‐month interval between assessments using the three aforementioned IQSS. A total of 64 evaluations per scale were generated. To assess reliability, intra‐ and inter‐rater intraclass correlation coefficient (ICC), and their 95% confidence intervals (CI) were calculated based on a mean rating (k = 4), absolute agreement, 2‐way random‐effects model. Results The inter‐rater agreement was classified as moderate to good inter‐rater reliability for all the scales, with the highest ICC found for the VAS (0.74 ± 0.11), followed by the CGS and the SDS (0.65 ± 0.22 and 0.63 ± 0.21, respectively). Intra‐rater agreement results demonstrated very good reliability for both VAS and SDS (0.82 ± 0.08; 0.81 ± 0.18, respectively) and excellent reliability for the CGS (0.91 ± 0.08). Main Limitations The use of video‐recordings instead of in situ evaluations, as the absence of audio may affect the assessment. Additionally, these findings are applicable only when free inductions are evaluated. Conclusions The VAS and the novel CGS are reliable IQSS in horses, as are the widely used SDS. As the SDS are inconsistent across the literature, the VAS would be advised if multiple evaluators assess induction quality for research purposes, whereas the CGS would be selected for studies involving a single observer. We suggest routine inclusion of the VAS in the evaluation of the anaesthetic induction in horses.

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Author Contributions: Leire Benavente-Sánchez: Methodology; writing – review and editing;visualization. Rocío Bustamante: Writing – review and editing; meth-odology; visualization. Isabel Santiago-Llorente: Conceptualization;investigation; funding acquisition; writing – review and editing;methodology; visualization; resources. María Villalba-Orero: Concep-tualization; investigation; funding acquisition; methodology; formalanalysis; writing – review and editing; supervision; resources. MartaVillalba-Díez: Writing – original draft; formal analysis

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