| Literature DB >> 19161599 |
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Assessing agreement in method comparison studies depends on two fundamentally important components; validity (the between method agreement) and reproducibility (the within method agreement). The Bland-Altman limits of agreement technique is one of the favoured approaches in medical literature for assessing between method validity. However, few researchers have adopted this approach for the assessment of both validity and reproducibility. This may be partly due to a lack of a flexible, easily implemented and readily available statistical machinery to analyse repeated measurement method comparison data.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2009 PMID: 19161599 PMCID: PMC2645135 DOI: 10.1186/1471-2288-9-6
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Med Res Methodol ISSN: 1471-2288 Impact factor: 4.615
Figure 1Box-plot of the subject's systolic blood pressure measurement standard deviations by their mean systolic blood pressure measurements grouped into three categories (< 125 mm Hg, 125–174 mm Hg, and 175+ mm Hg) for the two observers (J and R) and the automated machine (S).
Figure 2Box-plot of subject's mean difference between systolic blood pressure measurements (mm Hg) by their mean systolic blood pressure measurements grouped into three categories (< 125 mm Hg, 125–174 mm Hg, and 175+ mm Hg) for pair-wise comparisons (J and R), (J and S), and (R and S).
Posterior mean estimate and associated 95% credible region (95% CR) of the overall population mean.
| Observer J | Observer R | Machine S | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Post. mean (95% CR) | Post. mean (95% CR) | Post. mean (95% CR) | |
| 126.9 (120.6, 133.5) | 126.9 (120.5, 133.3) | 142.6 (135.9, 149.3) | |
| 37.7 (30.5, 46.6) | 38.3 (31.0, 47.3) | 83.9 (67.9, 104.0) | |
| 944.7 (697.3, 1278.0) | 926.4 (683.3, 1254.0) | 992.6 (727.9, 1351.0) | |
| 0.96 (0.95, 0.97) | 0.96 (0.94, 0.97) | 0.92 (0.89, 0.95) |
θm, within subject variance, , between subject variance, , and intra-class correlation coefficient, ICCm, for systolic blood pressure measured by two observers and the automated machine (m = J, R and S) from the multivariate hierarchical Bayesian method that assumes the underlying values remain static (HB1).
Estimates of bias, B(, and the associated 95% credible regions (95% CR) together with estimates of the 95% limits of agreement for pair-wise comparisons of systolic blood pressure measured by the two observers and the automated machine (m = J, R and S) from two multivariate hierarchical Bayesian models.
| J vs. R | J vs. S | R vs. S | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Mean (95% CR) | Mean (95% CR) | Mean (95% CR) | |
| Bias, | |||
| | 0.08 (-0.21, 0.37) | -15.6 (-19.7, -11.6) | -15.7 (-19.8, -11.7) |
| | 0.09 (-0.20, 0.37) | -15.4 (-19.5, -11.2) | -15.5 (-19.5, -11.3) |
| 95% limits of agreement | |||
| | (-4.36, 4.56) | (-56.2, 25.1) | (-56.0, 24.5) |
| | (-4.39, 4.57) | (-55.9, 25.0) | (-55.7, 24.6) |
| Within subject covariance of measurements between methods
| |||
| | 35.5 (28.5, 44.1) | 16.1 (7.7, 26.6) | 17.4 (8.9, 27.1) |
*Note: larger within subject covariance values are desirable.
HB1 which assumes that the underlying values remain static and uses the raw data, x, and HB2 which assumes that the underlying values can continually change and uses paired difference data, d(.
Figure 3Scatter-plots of measurement differences against measurement averages with the 95% limits of agreement superimposed (upper sub-plots) and histogram of measurement differences (lower sub-plots) for pair-wise comparisons of systolic blood pressure between the two observers (J & R), and between observer J and the automated machine S (J & S). The 95% limits of agreement appear in as the outer lines while the mean estimate of bias is given by the intermediate lines in the upper sub-plots.
Estimates of bias, B(, and the associated 95% credible regions (95% CR) together with estimates of the 95% limits of agreement for pair-wise comparisons of step counts.
| Bias, | 95% limits of agreement | ||
|---|---|---|---|
| Pair-wise comparisons ( | Mean | (95% CR) | |
| O vs. PLH | -0.22 | (-2.83, 2.28) | (-13.7, 13.2) |
| O vs. PRH | -0.89 | (-3.48, 1.70) | (-14.6, 12.8) |
| O vs. PB | -2.66 | (-5.39, 0.06) | (-17.2, 11.9) |
| PLH vs. PRH | -0.67 | (-3.12, 1.85) | (-13.5, 12.2) |
| PLH vs. PB | -2.44 | (-4.81, -0.05) | (-14.9, 10.1) |
| PRH vs. PB | -1.77 | (-3.72, 0.14) | (-12.0, 8.5) |
Measured by one observer (O) and pedometers located on the left hip (PLH), the right hip (PRH) and on the back (PB) at three different paces (normal walk, running, slow walking) on 9 pre-school children from HB2 which assumes that the underlying values can continually change and uses paired difference data, d(.
Figure 4Scatter-plots of measurement differences against measurement averages with the 95% limits of agreement superimposed and histogram of measurement differences for comparisons of step counts between the observer and the left hip placed pedometer. The 95% limits of agreement appear as the outer lines in the left hand figure while the mean estimate of bias is given by the intermediate line.