17. Variability
What to write
Any analyses of variability in diagnostic accuracy, distinguishing prespecified from exploratory.
Explanation
The relative proportion of false-positive or false-negative results of a diagnostic test may vary depending on patient characteristics, experience of readers, the setting and previous test results.1,2 Researchers may therefore want to explore possible sources of variability in test accuracy within their study. In such analyses, investigators typically assess differences in accuracy across subgroups of participants, readers or centres.
Post hoc analyses, performed after looking at the data, carry a high risk for spurious findings. The results are especially likely not to be confirmed by subsequent studies. Analyses that were prespecified in the protocol, before data were collected, have greater credibility.3
In the example, the authors reported that the accuracy of the urinary indices was evaluated in two subgroups that were explicitly prespecified.
Example
‘To assess the performance of urinary indices or their changes over the first 24 hours in distinguishing transient AKI [acute kidney injury] from persistent AKI, we plotted the receiver-operating characteristic curves for the proportion of true positives against the proportion of false positives, depending on the prediction rule used to classify patients as having persistent AKI. The same strategy was used to assess the performance of indices and their changes over time in two predefined patient subgroups; namely, patients who did not receive diuretic therapy and patients without sepsis’.4
Training
The UK EQUATOR Centre runs training on how to write using reporting guidelines.
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