Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
1082923 Journal of Clinical Epidemiology 2007 6 Pages PDF
Abstract

Background and ObjectiveReference limits are widely used in anthropometry, the behavioral sciences, medicine, and clinical chemistry. They describe the distribution of a quantitative variable in a healthy population, and are often a smooth function of age or another determinant. Thus, instead of estimating reference limits separately for several age groups, it is more economical and parsimonious to use regression methods to estimate reference limits as a function of age. Although the variability of regression-based reference limits has been addressed previously, the available methods to determine the sample sizes needed to estimate them are neither transparent nor user-friendly.MethodsWe propose a simple and intuitive formula using margins of error, to project the sample sizes required to achieve a given degree of precision, for different sampling strategies.ResultsWe present two examples for the calculation of the sample size required to estimate a specific reference limit using various age distributions.ConclusionWe provide a simple formula to calculate the sample size needed to estimate a specific reference limit to a specified degree of precision. The structure of the formula can easily accommodate different age-sampling strategies.

Related Topics
Health Sciences Medicine and Dentistry Public Health and Health Policy
Authors
, ,