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Abstract Details

Development and Validation of the ElectroSacroGram (ESG): A Digital Point-of-Care Tool for Real-time Neuro-sacral Assessment After Spinal Cord Injury
Neuro-rehabilitation
P5 - Poster Session 5 (11:45 AM-12:45 PM)
14-005

This study aimed to 1) develop the ElectroSacroGram (ESG) protocol based on clinical consensus; 2) evaluate its diagnostic performance compared to expert-performed Digital rectal examination (DRE) and radiological findings.

Accurate assessment of neuro-sacral function after spinal cord injury (SCI) is critical for diagnosis, prognosis, and acute management. However, current bedside standard, the digital rectal examination, remains subjective, and examiner-dependent. Surface electromyography (s-EMG) offers a quantitative alternative but lacks point-of-care integration. We developed and validated the ElectroSacroGram, a digital, s-EMG-based tool for real-time sacral neurophysiological assessment.

In this prospective diagnostic accuracy study at a specialized Level 1 trauma center, 52 patients with suspected SCI and 21 healthy participants underwent ESG and DRE. ESG captured sacral motor (resting anal tone, maximal voluntary anal contraction [maxVAC]), reflex (bulbospongious reflex [BSR]), and sensory (electrical perceptual threshold [EPT]) function using s-EMG and electrical stimulation. A nine-member expert panel selected clinically relevant DRE parameters and quantified content validity using item and scale content validity indices (I/S-CVI). Concurrent validity was evaluated through agreement between DRE and ESG using Cohen’s kappa (k). Diagnostic accuracy was assessed using contingency tables with imaging-confirmed spinal lesions as reference.

Neurologically impaired patients had lower maxVAC and BSR amplitudes and higher EPT than healthy participants. ESG showed excellent content validity (S-CVI=1) versus DRE (S-CVI=0.43). Agreement with DRE was almost perfect for VAC (κ=0.876) and EPT (κ=0.881), moderate for BSR (κ=0.671), and slight for resting anal tone (κ =0.205). ESG detected radiological abnormalities with 83.3% sensitivity, 100% specificity, and 86.5% overall accuracy.

ESG is a novel digital diagnostic tool that enables objective, real-time bedside neuro-sacral assessment. By overcoming the limitations of DRE, ESG may improve diagnostic precision and early decision-making in SCI. Its point-of-care digital format supports future integration with clinical decision support systems. Multicenter validation and longitudinal modeling are warranted.

Authors/Disclosures
Maude Duguay, MD
PRESENTER
Dr. Duguay has nothing to disclose.
Juan David Hernandez Cifuentes, MD Dr. Hernandez Cifuentes has nothing to disclose.
Natan Bensoussan, MD Dr. Bensoussan has nothing to disclose.
Jean-Marc Mac-Thiong, MD, PhD Dr. Mac-Thiong has received personal compensation in the range of $0-$499 for serving on a Scientific Advisory or Data Safety Monitoring board for Spinologics Inc. and subsidaries. Dr. Mac-Thiong has received personal compensation in the range of $0-$499 for serving as an officer or member of the Board of Directors for Spinologics Inc. and subsidaries. Dr. Mac-Thiong has stock in Spinologics Inc. and subsidaries. The institution of Dr. Mac-Thiong has received research support from Medtronic of Canada.
Andreane Richard Denis, MD The institution of Dr. Richard Denis has received research support from Canadian Institutes oh Health Research . The institution of Dr. Richard Denis has received research support from Craig H. Neilsen Foundation. The institution of Dr. Richard Denis has received research support from Medline Inc.