| Literature DB >> 31481098 |
Abstract
Results of medical tests are the main source to inform clinical decision making. The main information to assess the usefulness of medical tests for correct discrimination of patients are accuracy measures. For the estimation of test accuracy measures, many different study designs can be used. The study design is related to the clinical question to be answered (diagnosis, prognosis, prediction), determines the accuracy measures that can be calculated and it might have an influence on risk of bias. Therefore, a clear and consistent distinction of the different study designs in systematic reviews on test accuracy studies is very important. In this paper, we propose an algorithm for the classification of study designs of test accuracy, that compare the results of an index test (the test to be evaluated) with the results of a reference test (the test whose results are considered as correct/the gold standard) studies in systematic reviews.Entities:
Keywords: Diagnosis prognosis; Diagnostic accuracy; Prediction; Sensitivity; Specificity; Study design classification
Mesh:
Year: 2019 PMID: 31481098 PMCID: PMC6720081 DOI: 10.1186/s13643-019-1131-4
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Syst Rev ISSN: 2046-4053
Fig. 1Algorithm for classification of test accuracy study desings
Study designs to assess test accuracy
2 × 2 cross table for calculation of test accuracy measures
| Reference test | ||
|---|---|---|
| Positive | Negative | |
| Index test | ||
| Positive | True positive | False positive |
| Negative | False negative | True negative |
Examples for the different accuracy study types
| Example study | Population | Diseases /outcome | Index test | Reference test/outcome | Time between Index and reference test | Sampling | Type |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 [ | Kidney transplant recipients aged ≥ 50 years | Colorectal caner | Faecal immunochemical testing | Colonoscopy with histological evaluation | Directly referred to reference after receiving the index test | All kidney transplant recipients aged ≥ 50 years | Diagnostic accuracy cohort-type cross-sectional study |
| 2 [ | Attended a memory clinic | Alzheimer dementia | Cognitive test | Clinical diagnosis of Alzheimer’s | Reference test and index test during outpatient visit | Three age matched controls were selected for each patient with Alzheimer’s disease | Diagnostic accuracy case-control type cross-sectional study |
| 3 [ | Age 50–90 years | Osteoporotic fractures | Prognostic model | Hip fracture | 5 years | All patients in a payer provider health organisation | Prognostic accuracy cohort study |
| 4 [ | Men ≥ 40 years | Prostate cancer | Prostate specific antigen screening using blood draws | Prostate cancer diagnosed using biopsy | Mean 7.1 years | 540 cases and 1034 controls matched for age and date of blood draw | Prognostic accuracy case-control study |