PURPOSE: To describe quality indicators for appraising studies of diagnostic accuracy and to report a meta-analysis of measures for diagnosing language impairment (LI) in bilingual Spanish-English U.S. children. METHOD: The authors searched electronically and by hand to locate peer-reviewed English-language publications meeting inclusion criteria; the authors rated quality features, calculated accuracy metrics and confidence intervals, and generated forest plots. RESULTS: Of 771 citations (86 unique) located initially, accuracy metrics could be calculated for 17 index measures studied in a total of 100 children with LI and 109 with typical language. Most studies lacked clear descriptions of reference standards, procedures, and controls for subjective bias, making it difficult to rate specific quality features with confidence. Positive likelihood ratios (LR+) for most measures were at least diagnostically suggestive (pooled LR+ = 4.12; 95% CI [2.94, 5.78]). Negative likelihood ratios (LR-) were also generally suggestive, but heterogeneity precluded averaging. For every measure, confidence intervals for LR+ and LR- included diagnostically uninformative values. CONCLUSIONS: The available evidence does not support strong claims concerning the diagnostic accuracy of these measures, but a number appear promising. Several steps are suggested for strengthening future investigations of diagnostic accuracy.
PURPOSE: To describe quality indicators for appraising studies of diagnostic accuracy and to report a meta-analysis of measures for diagnosing language impairment (LI) in bilingual Spanish-English U.S. children. METHOD: The authors searched electronically and by hand to locate peer-reviewed English-language publications meeting inclusion criteria; the authors rated quality features, calculated accuracy metrics and confidence intervals, and generated forest plots. RESULTS: Of 771 citations (86 unique) located initially, accuracy metrics could be calculated for 17 index measures studied in a total of 100 children with LI and 109 with typical language. Most studies lacked clear descriptions of reference standards, procedures, and controls for subjective bias, making it difficult to rate specific quality features with confidence. Positive likelihood ratios (LR+) for most measures were at least diagnostically suggestive (pooled LR+ = 4.12; 95% CI [2.94, 5.78]). Negative likelihood ratios (LR-) were also generally suggestive, but heterogeneity precluded averaging. For every measure, confidence intervals for LR+ and LR- included diagnostically uninformative values. CONCLUSIONS: The available evidence does not support strong claims concerning the diagnostic accuracy of these measures, but a number appear promising. Several steps are suggested for strengthening future investigations of diagnostic accuracy.
Authors: Anny Castilla-Earls; Lisa Bedore; Raúl Rojas; Leah Fabiano-Smith; Sonja Pruitt-Lord; María Adelaida Restrepo; Elizabeth Peña Journal: Am J Speech Lang Pathol Date: 2020-08-04 Impact factor: 2.408
Authors: Anny P Castilla-Earls; María Adelaida Restrepo; Ana Teresa Perez-Leroux; Shelley Gray; Paul Holmes; Daniel Gail; Ziqiang Chen Journal: Appl Psycholinguist Date: 2015-11-25