Comparing Clinical Measurement Methods - Carstensen, Bendix
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Présentation Comparing Clinical Measurement Methods Format Relié
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Résumé : Biostatisticians, clinicians, medical researchers and practitioners involved in research and analysis of measurement methods and laboratory investigations will benefit from this book. Students of statistics, biostatistics, and the chemical sciences will also find this book useful.
This book provides a practical guide to analysis of simple and complex method comparison data, using Stata, SAS and R. It takes the classical Limits of Agreement as a starting point, and presents it in a proper statistical framework. The model serves as a reference for reporting sources of variation and for providing conversion equations and plots between methods for practical use, including prediction uncertainty.
Biographie: Bendix Carstensen, Senior Statistician at Steno Diabetes Center, Denmark...
Sommaire: 1 Introduction. 2 Method comparisons. 2.1 One measurement by each method. 2.1.1 Prediction of one method from another. 2.1.2 Why not use the correlation? 2.1.3 A new method and a reference method. 2.2 Replicate measurements by each method. 2.2.1 Exchangeable replicates: fat data. 2.2.2 Linked replicates: oximetry data. 2.2.3 Why not use the averages of the replicates? 2.3 More than two methods. 2.4 Terminology and notation. 2.5 What it is all about. 3 How to... 3.1 ...use this chapter. 3.2 Two methods. 3.2.1 Single measurements. 3.2.2 Comparing with a gold standard. 3.2.3 Replicate measurements. 3.3 More than two methods. 3.3.1 Single measurements. 3.3.2 Replicate measurements. 4 Two methods with a single measurement on each. 4.1 Model for limits of agreement. 4.1.1 Prediction between methods. 4.1.2 The correlation of the difference and the average. 4.2 Non-constant difference between methods. 4.3 A worked example. 4.4 What really goes on. 4.4.1 Scaling. 4.4.2 Independence. 4.4.3 Actual behavior. 4.5 Other regression methods for non-constant bias. 4.5.1 Why ordinary regression fails. 4.5.2 Deming regression. 4.6 Comparison with a gold standard. 4.7 Non-constant variance. 4.7.1 Regression approach. 4.7.2 A worked example. 4.8 Transformations. 4.8.1 Log transformation. 4.9 Summary. 5 Replicate measurements. 5.1 Pairing of replicate measurements. 5.1.1 Exchangeable replicates. 5.1.2 Linked replicates. 5.2 Plotting replicate measurements. 5.3 Models for replicate measurements. 5.3.1 Exchangeable replicates. 5.3.2 Linked replicates. 5.4 Interpretation of the random effects. 5.5 Estimation. 5.6 Getting it wrong and getting it almost right. 5.6.1 Averaging over replicates. 5.6.2 Replicates as items. 5.7 Summary. 6 Several methods of measurement. 6.1 Model. 6.2 Replicate measurements. 6.3 Single measurement by each method. 7 A general model for method comparisons. 7.1 Scaling. 7.2 Interpretation of the random effects. 7.3 Parametrization of the mean. 7.4 Prediction limits. 7.4.1 Mean of replicates. 7.4.2 Plotting predictions between methods. 7.4.3 Reporting variance components. 7.4.4 Comparison with a gold standard. 7.5 Estimation. 7.5.1 Alternating regressions. 7.5.2 Estimation using BUGS. 7.5.3 A worked example. 7.6 Models with non-constant variance. 7.6.1 Linear dependence of residual standard error. 7.7 Summary. 8 Transformation of measurements. 8.1 Log transformation. 8.2 Transformations of percentages. 8.2.1 A worked example. 8.2.2 Implementation in MethComp. 8.3 Other transformations. 8.4 Several methods. 8.5 Variance components. 8.6 Summary. 9 Repeatability, reproducibility and coefficient of variation. 9.1 Repeatability. 9.2 Reproducibility. 9.3 Coefficient of variation. 9.3.1 Symmetric interval on the log scale. 9.3.2 Computing the CV correctly. 9.3.3 Transformations. 10 Measures of association and agreement. 10.1 Individual bioequivalence criterion. 10.2 Agreement index. 10.3 Relative variance index. 10.4 Total deviation index. 10.5 Correlation measures. 10.5.1 Corre...
Acknowledgments.
This book presents useful information about the complexities of method comparison studies specific to clinical/biomedical research... I would consider using it in a course intended for students seeking advanced degrees in biostatistics and epidemiology. (Doody's, 16 September 2011) In conclusion, this book provides a statistical modeling approach to the comparison of clinical measurements. The modeling aspects will be particularly appreciated by researchers and others mathematically sophisticated, while the computer code at the end of the book will be useful for practitioners wishing to implement the methods. (Journal of Biopharmaceutical Statistics, January 2011)
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