Assessing accuracy of a continuous screening test in the presence of verification bias

In studies to assess the accuracy of a screening test, often definitive disease assessment is too invasive or expensive to be ascertained on all the study subjects. Although it may be more ethical or cost effective to ascertain the true disease status with a higher rate in study subjects where the s...

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Bibliographic Details
Published inApplied statistics Vol. 54; no. 1; pp. 173 - 190
Main Authors Alonzo, Todd A., Pepe, Margaret Sullivan
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published Oxford, UK Blackwell Publishing Ltd 01.01.2005
Blackwell Publishers
Blackwell
Royal Statistical Society
Oxford University Press
SeriesJournal of the Royal Statistical Society Series C
Subjects
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Summary:In studies to assess the accuracy of a screening test, often definitive disease assessment is too invasive or expensive to be ascertained on all the study subjects. Although it may be more ethical or cost effective to ascertain the true disease status with a higher rate in study subjects where the screening test or additional information is suggestive of disease, estimates of accuracy can be biased in a study with such a design. This bias is known as verification bias. Verification bias correction methods that accommodate screening tests with binary or ordinal responses have been developed; however, no verification bias correction methods exist for tests with continuous results. We propose and compare imputation and reweighting bias-corrected estimators of true and false positive rates, receiver operating characteristic curves and area under the receiver operating characteristic curve for continuous tests. Distribution theory and simulation studies are used to compare the proposed estimators with respect to bias, relative efficiency and robustness to model misspecification. The bias correction estimators proposed are applied to data from a study of screening tests for neonatal hearing loss.
Bibliography:istex:4C5D4AE612F4FEA2B3F3EA2CA1CCEA17C98CEBB5
ark:/67375/WNG-H7PHNS96-M
ArticleID:RSSC477
SourceType-Scholarly Journals-1
ObjectType-Feature-1
content type line 14
ISSN:0035-9254
1467-9876
DOI:10.1111/j.1467-9876.2005.00477.x