Likelihood to be diagnosed or misdiagnosed

To extend use of the recently described 'likelihood to be diagnosed or misdiagnosed' (LDM) metric for test accuracy studies through application to recent meta-analytic data of commonly used cognitive screening instruments. Methods: Raw data (true positives and negatives, false positives and negatives) were extracted from meta-analyses (minimum 5 studies or 1000 patients), from which LDM was calculated. LDM values were compared with those previously reported for single test accuracy studies. Results: LDM values for diagnosis of dementia ranged from around two to seven, and for diagnosis of mild cognitive impairment from two to three. LDM values based on meta-analytic data were larger than those reported for individual studies. Conclusion: LDM is an easily calculated and potentially useful unitary, global metric for test accuracy studies 1).


1)
Williamson JC, Larner AJ. 'Likelihood to be diagnosed or misdiagnosed': application to meta-analytic data for cognitive screening instruments. Neurodegener Dis Manag. 2019 Apr 18. doi: 10.2217/nmt-2018-0041. [Epub ahead of print] PubMed PMID: 30998117.
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