Epidemiology (III) Screening Basics Flashcards

1
Q

What type of prevention is screening?

A

Secondary (early detection of disease)

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2
Q

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

A

Screening tests - detect early disease or risk factors for disease in large numbers of apparently healthy individuals. (identification in asymptomatic patients) Diagnostic tests - establish the presence (or absence) of disease as a basis for treatment decisions in symptomatic or screen-positive individuals (confirmatory test). (confirmation in symptomatic patients)

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3
Q

What part of the disease’s pathogenesis must be present for a screening to be useful?

A

A detectable preclinical phase

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4
Q

What are some considerations to make before developing a screening tool?

A

Is there a long, recognizable preclinical phase?

Can we improve the prognosis with earlier detection?

Is the test valid and reliable?

Is it sufficiently cheap and noninvasive?

How harmful can the test be?

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5
Q

What is external validity?

A

Generalizability of results to the general public

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6
Q

What is internal validity in screening?

A

The test measures what it is designed to measure

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7
Q

What is reliability in screening?

A

Consistency and replicability of the test

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8
Q

What are two measures of a screening test’s validity?

A

Sensitivity and specificity

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9
Q

What is screening sensitivity?

A

The ability of the test to correctly identify those with the disease

(the proportion of people with the disease who test positive)

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10
Q

A test with a high sensitivity has a low what?

(Hint: it is measured by 1 - sensitivity)

A

A low false-negative rate

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11
Q

For what type of test is a high sensitivity especially important?

A

Screening tests

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12
Q

Why are false negatives damaging?

A

They can lure diseased patients into a false sense of security and delay disease detection.

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13
Q

What is screening specificity?

A

The ability of the test to correctly identify those who do not have the disease.

(the proportion of people without the disease who test negative)

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14
Q

A test with a high specificity has a low what?

(Hint: it is measured as 1 - specificity)

A

A low false-positive rate

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15
Q

For what type of test is a high specificity especially important?

A

Confirmation tests

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16
Q

Why are false positives damaging?

A

They may cause unnecessary anxiety and panic (think of a diagnosis with HIV or metastatic pancreatic cancer)

17
Q

How is sensitivity measured?

A

TP / (TP + FN)

(true positives divided by everyone that has the disease)

(how many of the diseased individuals did the test successfully identify?)

18
Q

How is specificity measured?

A

TN / (TN + FP)

(true negatives divided by all the healthy individuals)

(how many of the healthy individuals did the test successfully identify?)

19
Q

How can we identify which test should be the gold-standard diagnostic technique?

A

The test with the desired sensitivity and specificity is the gold-standard

20
Q

What is important about a test’s cutoff point for a disease case definition?

A

It determines the properties of the disease (high sensitivity or high specificity)

21
Q

What happens to specificity as sensitivity increases?

A

Specificity decreases (and vice versa)

22
Q

What questions about false-negatives and false-positives should be asked when selecting how sensitive and specific a test will be?

A

What is the consequence of an undetected case (can we wait to test again later, or does the disease progress rapidly)?

What is the consequence of calling a disease-free person a positive (will there be invasive tests, stress, high costs, or time wasted)?

23
Q

What does the ‘ROC’ in ROC curve stand for?

A

Receiver operating characteristic

24
Q

How is an ROC curve formed?

A

By plotting the true positive rate (sensitivity) against the false positive rate (1 - specificity)

(basically, probability of detection vs. probability of a false alarm)

25
Q

Where will a cutoff point do the least harm in the overlapping distributions of health and diseased individuals?

A
26
Q

How can the best cutoff point be determined from an ROC curve?

A

The point nearest the upper lefthand corner