22. Time interval
What to write
Time interval and any clinical interventions between index test and reference standard.
Explanation
Studies of diagnostic accuracy are essentially cross-sectional investigations. In most cases, one wants to know how well the index test classified patients in the same way as the reference standard, when both tests are performed in the same patients, at the same time.1 When a delay occurs between the index test and the reference standard, the target condition and alternative conditions can change; conditions may worsen, or improve in the meanwhile, due to the natural course of the disease, or due to clinical interventions applied between the two tests. Such changes influence the agreement between the index test and the reference standard, which could lead to biased estimates of test performance.
The bias can be more severe if the delay differs systematically between test positives and test negatives, or between those with a high prior suspicion of having the target condition and those with a low suspicion.2,3
When follow-up is used as the reference standard, readers will want to know how long the follow-up period was.
In the example, the authors reported the mean number of days, and a range, between the index test and the reference standard.
Example
‘The mean time between arthrometric examination and MR imaging was 38.2 days (range, 0–107 days)’.4
Training
The UK EQUATOR Centre runs training on how to write using reporting guidelines.
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