27. Implications for Practice
What to write
Implications for practice, including the intended use and clinical role of the index test.
Explanation
To make the study findings relevant for practice, authors of diagnostic accuracy studies should elaborate on the consequences of their findings, taking into account the intended use (the purpose of testing) and clinical role of the test (how will the test be positioned in the existing clinical pathway).
A test can be proposed for diagnostic purposes, for susceptibility, screening, risk stratification, staging, prediction, prognosis, treatment selection, monitoring, surveillance or other purposes. The clinical role of the test reflects its positioning relative to existing tests for the same purpose, within the same clinical setting: triage, add-on or replacement.1,2 The intended use and the clinical role of the index test should have been described in the introduction of the paper (Item 3).
The intended use and the proposed role will guide the desired magnitude of the measures of diagnostic accuracy. For ruling-out disease with an inexpensive triage test, for example, high sensitivity is required, and less-than-perfect specificity may be acceptable. If the test is supposed to rule-in disease, specificity may become much more important.3
In the Discussion section, authors should elaborate on whether or not the accuracy estimates are sufficient for considering the test to be ‘fit for purpose’.
In the example, the authors concluded that the combination of a Wells score ≤4 and a negative point-of-care D-dimer result could reliably rule-out pulmonary embolism in a large proportion of patients seen in primary care.
Example
‘A Wells score of ≤4 combined with a negative point of care D-dimer test result ruled out pulmonary embolism in 4–5 of 10 patients, with a failure rate of less than 2%, which is considered safe by most published consensus statements. Such a rule-out strategy makes it possible for primary care doctors to safely exclude pulmonary embolism in a large proportion of patients suspected of having the condition, thereby reducing the costs and burden to the patient (for example, reducing the risk of contrast nephropathy associated with spiral computed tomography) associated with an unnecessary referral to secondary care’.4
Training
The UK EQUATOR Centre runs training on how to write using reporting guidelines.
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