Published in:
01-04-2011 | Original Research
Does Prevalence Matter to Physicians in Estimating Post-test Probability of Disease? A Randomized Trial
Authors:
Thomas Agoritsas, MD, Delphine S. Courvoisier, PhD, Christophe Combescure, PhD, Marie Deom, MD, Thomas V. Perneger, MD, PhD
Published in:
Journal of General Internal Medicine
|
Issue 4/2011
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ABSTRACT
BACKGROUND
The probability of a disease following a diagnostic test depends on the sensitivity and specificity of the test, but also on the prevalence of the disease in the population of interest (or pre-test probability). How physicians use this information is not well known.
OBJECTIVE
To assess whether physicians correctly estimate post-test probability according to various levels of prevalence and explore this skill across respondent groups.
PARTICIPANTS
Population-based sample of 1,361 physicians of all clinical specialties.
INTERVENTION
We described a scenario of a highly accurate screening test (sensitivity 99% and specificity 99%) in which we randomly manipulated the prevalence of the disease (1%, 2%, 10%, 25%, 95%, or no information).
MAIN MEASURES
We asked physicians to estimate the probability of disease following a positive test (categorized as <60%, 60–79%, 80–94%, 95–99.9%, and >99.9%). Each answer was correct for a different version of the scenario, and no answer was possible in the “no information” scenario. We estimated the proportion of physicians proficient in assessing post-test probability as the proportion of correct answers beyond the distribution of answers attributable to guessing.
KEY RESULTS
Most respondents in each of the six groups (67%–82%) selected a post-test probability of 95–99.9%, regardless of the prevalence of disease and even when no information on prevalence was provided. This answer was correct only for a prevalence of 25%. We estimated that 9.1% (95% CI 6.0–14.0) of respondents knew how to assess correctly the post-test probability. This proportion did not vary with clinical experience or practice setting.
CONCLUSIONS
Most physicians do not take into account the prevalence of disease when interpreting a positive test result. This may cause unnecessary testing and diagnostic errors.