From the *The School of Population and Public Health, University of British Columbia, Vancouver, Canada; †The Department of Statistics, University of British Columbia, Vancouver, Canada; and ‡British Columbia Centre for Disease Control, Vancouver, Canada.
Sex Transm Dis. 2014 May;41(5):321-30. doi: 10.1097/OLQ.0000000000000120.
Prediction rules have been proposed as alternatives to screening recommendations and have potential applications in sexual health decision making. To our knowledge, there has been no review undertaken providing a critical appraisal of existing prediction rules in sexual health contexts. This review aims to identify and characterize prediction rules developed and validated for sexually transmitted infection (STI) screening, describe the methodological issues essential to the suitability of derived models for clinical or public health application, and synthesize the literature on the performance of these models.
We searched MEDLINE (2003-2012) to identify studies that reported on models predicting STIs. We explored the methodological quality of the studies based on a 16-item quality assessment checklist. We also evaluated the studies based on data extracted on model discrimination, calibration, sensitivity, and testing efficiency.
We identified 16 publications reporting on STI prediction rules. The most poorly addressed quality items were missing values, calibration measures, and variable definition. Overall, the performance of risk models as measured by discrimination (area under the receiver operating characteristic curve range, 0.64-0.88) and calibration was found to be generally good or satisfactory. Eight studies attained or were close to attaining the performance benchmark of testing less than 60% of the target population to achieve 90% sensitivity. The 2 risk models that were externally validated displayed adequate discrimination in new settings.
Although we identified several well-performing STI risk prediction rules, few have been validated. Future developments in the use of prediction rules should address their clinical consequence, comparative usefulness, external validity, and implementation impact.
预测规则已被提出作为筛选建议的替代方法,并且在性健康决策中具有潜在的应用。据我们所知,尚未有任何审查对性健康背景下现有的预测规则进行批判性评估。本综述旨在确定和描述为性传播感染(STI)筛查开发和验证的预测规则,并描述对于临床或公共卫生应用,模型的适用性至关重要的方法学问题,并综合这些模型的性能文献。
我们搜索了 MEDLINE(2003-2012),以确定报告预测 STI 模型的研究。我们根据 16 项质量评估清单探索了研究的方法学质量。我们还根据提取的模型区分度、校准、敏感性和测试效率数据评估了研究。
我们确定了 16 篇报告 STI 预测规则的出版物。最未解决的质量项目是缺失值、校准措施和变量定义。总体而言,风险模型的性能(接收者操作特征曲线下的面积范围为 0.64-0.88)和校准被发现通常是好的或令人满意的。有 8 项研究达到或接近达到测试目标人群少于 60%以实现 90%敏感性的性能基准。在新环境中进行外部验证的 2 个风险模型显示出足够的区分度。
尽管我们确定了几个性能良好的 STI 风险预测规则,但很少有得到验证。预测规则的未来发展应解决其临床后果、比较有用性、外部有效性和实施影响。