| Literature DB >> 18214157 |
Marcelo Chaffer1, Ariel L Rivas, Daniel Elad, Ori Koren, Shlomo Garazi, Gerardo Chowell, Steven J Schwager.
Abstract
The overall accuracy of an enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay (ELISA) used to detect Johne's disease at herd level was explored in relation to an imperfect test (fecal culture) in 57 Israeli dairy herds. Receiver-operating characteristic (ROC) analysis indicated an area under the curve (AUC) that corresponded to a test accuracy of 82.0% (69.5% to 90.9%; 95% confidence), with optimized herd sensitivity and herd specificity of 70.4% and 83.3%, respectively; and predictive values of 79.2 (+) and 75.8% (-). The optimal ELISA cutoff was 3.16% (> 3.16% seropositive cows in a herd), which was associated with likelihood ratios (LR) of 4.22 (+LR) and 0.36 (-LR), and post-test probabilities of 0.79 (+) and 0.17 (-). For herds with < or = 200 cows (n = 19 herds), the 95% confidence interval (CI) for the AUC was 0.62-0.97 and the optimal cutoff was 3.33% (HSe = 87.5, HSp = 81.8); for herds with > 200 but < or = 270 cows (n = 19 herds), the 95% AUC CI was 0.62-0.97 and the optimal cutoff was 1.13% (HSe = 90.0, HSp = 77.78); and for herds with > 270 cows (n = 19 herds), the 95% AUC CI was 0.69-0.99 and the optimal cutoff was 0.7% (HSe = 100.0, HSp = 70.0). The AUC was not influenced by across-herd prevalence [R2 (adjusted) = 0.0, P > 0.05]. Findings may be applied to facilitate targeted sampling of herds similar to those evaluated. For instance, a test cutoff of 0.76% could be considered for "ruling disease in," while a cutoff of 3.7% could be used for "ruling disease out." Caveats that may influence this analysis are discussed.Entities:
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Year: 2008 PMID: 18214157 PMCID: PMC2117362
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Can J Vet Res ISSN: 0830-9000 Impact factor: 1.310