Session 7 Flashcards
(32 cards)
How can disease be detected?
Spontaneous presentation
Opportunistic case finding
Screening
What is Spontaneous presentation?
The person presents with symptoms and defines self as patient eg. GP, A&E
What is Opportunistic case finding?
Person presents with symptoms relating to a disease/problem
Gp takes the opportunity to check for other diseases eg Urine dipstick, Blood pressure
What is Screening?
Systematic attempt to detect an unrecognised condition (So no signs/symptoms yet) by the application of tests, examinations or other procedures
Can be applied rapidly and cheaply to distinguish between apparently well people who probably have a disease (or its precursor) an those who probably do not
What happens if a patient screens positive for a disease?
They are at a high risk of getting the disease and will have diagnostic tests to see if they have the disease or not
Does NOT mean they definitely have the disease
How many patients with a positive screen for breast cancer have it?
~8%
What is the purpose of screening?
To have a better outcome compared to if the patient had found it in the usual way
Finding something earlier is NOT the primary outcome of screening
There is no point in screening if treatment can wait until symptoms appear with no difference in survival rates
What are some examples of the NHS screening programmes in the UK?
Breast cancer
Bowel cancer
Cervical cancer
Diabetic retinopathy (Specific population)
Abdominal Aortic aneurysm (Men at a specific age)
Fetal abnormalities
What features should the disease have for a screening process?
Must be an important health problem
Epidemiology and Natural history must be understood
Must have an early detectable stage
Cost effective Primary prevention interventions must have been considered and implemented where possible
What properties should all Screening tests have?
Simple & safe (As will be screening healthy people)
Precise & valid
Acceptable to the population
Distribution of test values in the population must be known
Agreed cut off level must be defined
Agreed policy on who to investigate further
What are the 2 main errors any screening test will make?
False positives (Healthy people who test positive) False negatives (Ill people who test negative)
What are the features of test validity?
Sensitivity (Detection rate)
Specificity
Positive predictive value
Negative predictive value
What is Sensitivity of a test?
Proportion of people with the disease who test positive
How do you calculate sensitivity?
True positives / (True positives + False negatives)
What does high sensitivity mean?
The test is good at correctly identifying people with the disease you are screening for
What is Specificity of a test?
Proportion of people without the disease who test negative
How do you calculate specificity?
True negatives / (False positives + True negatives)
What does a high specificity mean?
Test is good at identifying people without the disease as not having the disease
Sensitivity & Specificity are a function of the characteristics of the test, what does this mean?
That when the test is applied in the same way in different populations, the test will have the same Sensitivity and Specificty
What is the Positive predictive value?
Proportion of people who test positive that actually have the disease
Value is strongly influenced by the prevalence of the disease (A low prevalence disease may have a lower PPV than a higher prevalence disease even if the sensitivity and specificity of the tests are the same)
How do you calculate the Positive predictive value?
True positives / (True positives + False positives)
How do you calculate the prevalence of a disease?
(True positives + False negatives) / Whole population
What is Negative predictive value?
Proportion of people who are test negative who actually do NOT have the disease
How do you calculate Negative predictive value?
True negatives / (False negatives + True negatives)