Diagnostic & Screening Tests in Respiratory Disease Flashcards

1
Q

What is the difference between a diagnostic test and a screening test?

A

Diagnostic Test:
Purpose: confirmation of disease or otherwise ie, establish diagnosis
- results are (mostly) definitive
- applied to patients in whom there is clinical suspicion of disease - ie, high pre-test probability of disease

Screening Test:
Purpose: identification of patients who may have disease
- results are preliminary - need confirmation with diagnostic (definitive) test(s)
- applied to people in whom there is no clinical suspicion of disease - ie, lower pre-test probability of disease

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2
Q

What are sensitivity and specificity?

A

sensitivity = TP / TP+FN = % people with disease that test positive

specificity = TN / TN+FP = % people without disease that test negative

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3
Q

What is the difference between a positive predictive value and a negative predictive value?

A

positive predictive value = TP / TP+FP = % positive tests that is truly positive

negative predictive value = TN / TN+FN = % negative tests that is truly negative

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4
Q

Explain the features surrounding underlying prevalence of disease.

A
  • sensitivity and specificity are inherent to a test and are constant
  • PPV and NPV are dependent on:
    -sensitivity and specificity
    -underlying prevalence of disease
  • PPV positively correlated with underlying prevalence of disease (and NPV negatively correlated with underlying prevalence)
  • utility of diagnostic/screening test
    dependent on prevalence of disease
  • order diagnostic tests only if there is strong clinical suspicion of disease
  • do not use diagnostic tests to screen for diseases
  • screening tests need to be targeted to ‘high risk’ individuals - eg, mammography in women >50yr
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5
Q

What is meant by liklihood ratios?

A
  • likelihood that a given test result would be expected in a patient with the disease compared to a patient without the disease
  • LR of positive test = sensitivity / (1-specificity)
  • LR of negative test = (1-sensitivity) / specificity
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6
Q

Explain the relationship between specificity and sensitivity?

A

The trade-off between sensitivity and specificity is that most test results expressed on continuous scale, and arbitrary thresholds define presence of disease - eg, FEV1 and COPD however disease states are often not absolute

- lower threshold: ↑ sensitivity, ↓ specificity 
- higher threshold: ↓ sensitivity, ↑ specificity
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7
Q

What is the purpose of a Receiver Operator Characteristic (ROC) Curve?

A
  • plot: 1-specificity vs sensitivity for various thresholds (cut-off values) for a test
  • graphical representation of trade-off between sensitivity and specificity in tests
  • indicates how well a test discriminates people with disease from people without disease
  • ideal test (full discrimination): 100% sensitivity and 0% 1-specificity (100% specificity) - ie, test picks up everyone with disease and no-one without
  • no discrimination: perfect correlation between sensitivity and 1-specificity - ie, test just as likely to ‘pick up’ people with disease as people without
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8
Q

What is meant by screening?

A
  • key preventive strategy
  • rationale: early detection  better outcomes
  • assessment of a population to identify:
    • risk factors (primary prevention)
    • early disease (secondary prevention)
  • undertaken on largely healthy people
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9
Q

What are The WHO Criteria for Screening?

A
The WHO Criteria for Screening:
• important health problem 
• natural history well understood 
• detectable early stage 
• early treatment beneficial 
• suitable test for early disease 
• acceptable test 
• intervals for testing determined 
• adequate healthcare provision for extra workload 
• risks (including psychological) less than benefits 
• costs balanced against benefits
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10
Q

What are some limitations of screening?

A

There are some limitations for Screening:

  • inaccuracy of screening tests
  • may not be cost-effective
  • physical and psychological side-effects
  • biases in measurement of effectiveness
    • selection - healthy more likely to be screened
    • lead-time - early detection, not prolonged survival
    • length-time - detection of non-aggressive disease
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