1. Identification as a study of diagnostic accuracy
What to write
Identification as a study of diagnostic accuracy using at least one measure of accuracy (such as sensitivity, specificity, predictive values, or AUC).
Explanation
When searching for relevant biomedical studies on a certain topic, electronic databases such as MEDLINE and Embase are indispensable. To facilitate retrieval of their article, authors can explicitly identify it as a report of a diagnostic accuracy study. This can be performed by using terms in the title and/or abstract that refer to measures of diagnostic accuracy, such as ‘sensitivity’, ‘specificity’, ‘positive predictive value’, ‘negative predictive value’, ‘area under the ROC curve (AUC)’ or ‘likelihood ratio’.
In 1991, MEDLINE introduced a specific keyword (MeSH heading) for indexing diagnostic studies: ‘Sensitivity and Specificity.’ Unfortunately, the sensitivity of using this particular MeSH heading to identify diagnostic accuracy studies can be as low as 51%.1 As of May 2015, Embase's thesaurus (Emtree) has 38 check tags for study types; ‘diagnostic test accuracy study’ is one of them, but was only introduced in 2011.
In the example, the authors mentioned the terms ‘sensitivity’ and ‘specificity’ in the abstract. The article will now be retrieved when using one of these terms in a search strategy, and will be easily identifiable as one describing a diagnostic accuracy study.
Example
‘Main outcome measures: Sensitivity and specificity of CT colonography in detecting individuals with advanced neoplasia (i.e., advanced adenoma or colorectal cancer) 6 mm or larger’.2
Training
The UK EQUATOR Centre runs training on how to write using reporting guidelines.
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