Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
1083358 | Journal of Clinical Epidemiology | 2009 | 5 Pages |
BackgroundThe probability of a disease, given the result of two diagnostic tests, can be calculated by multiplying the odds of disease after the first test by the likelihood ratio of the second test.ObjectiveTo illustrate the error that occurs when calculating disease probability by combining the results of tests that are correlated.MethodsSimulation study in which we randomly generated disease status and the results of two binary tests for a range of disease prevalence, test-operating characteristics, and correlation between tests. The primary outcome was the absolute difference between calculated and true probability of disease after two positive tests.ResultsWhen the tests were correlated, the calculated probability of a disease exceeded the true probability of the disease. With perfect correlation, the true probability of the disease after two positive tests equaled that after a single positive test. Error arising from correlated tests increased as the difference in the calculated probability between the first and second positive tests increased. We noted several combinations of disease prevalence, test-operating characteristics, and test correlation where the absolute difference between calculated and true probability of disease exceeded 25%.ConclusionDisease probability is overestimated when the results of correlated tests are combined. Clinicians must consider the correlation between serial tests when calculating the posttest probability.