Litcius/Paper detail

Estimating Cancer Screening Sensitivity and Specificity Using Healthcare Utilization Data: Defining the Accuracy Assessment Interval

Jessica Chubak, Andrea N. Burnett‐Hartman, William E. Barlow, Douglas A. Corley, Jennifer M. Croswell, Christine Neslund‐Dudas, Anil Vachani, Michelle I. Silver, Jasmin A. Tiro, Aruna Kamineni

2022Cancer Epidemiology Biomarkers & Prevention11 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

The effectiveness and efficiency of cancer screening in real-world settings depend on many factors, including test sensitivity and specificity. Outside of select experimental studies, not everyone receives a gold standard test that can serve as a comparator in estimating screening test accuracy. Thus, many studies of screening test accuracy use the passage of time to infer whether or not cancer was present at the time of the screening test, particularly for patients with a negative screening test. We define the accuracy assessment interval as the period of time after a screening test that is used to estimate the test's accuracy. We describe how the length of this interval may bias sensitivity and specificity estimates. We call for future research to quantify bias and uncertainty in accuracy estimates and to provide guidance on setting accuracy assessment interval lengths for different cancers and screening modalities.

Topics & Concepts

Test (biology)Sensitivity (control systems)StatisticsGold standard (test)Interval (graph theory)Cancer screeningScreening testMedicineConfidence intervalComputer scienceCancerMathematicsInternal medicinePediatricsBiologyElectronic engineeringEngineeringCombinatoricsPaleontologyColorectal Cancer Screening and DetectionGlobal Cancer Incidence and ScreeningHealth Systems, Economic Evaluations, Quality of Life