Analyses within risk strata overestimate gain in discrimination: the example of coronary artery calcium scores
Access status:
Open Access
Type
Report, ResearchAbstract
Risk prediction models are potentially useful tools for health practitioners and policy makers. When new predictors are proposed to add to existing models, the improvement of discrimination is one of the main measures to assess any increment in performance. In assessing such ...
See moreRisk prediction models are potentially useful tools for health practitioners and policy makers. When new predictors are proposed to add to existing models, the improvement of discrimination is one of the main measures to assess any increment in performance. In assessing such predictors, we observed two paradoxes: 1) the discriminative ability within all individual risk strata was worse than for the overall population; 2) incremental discrimination after including a new predictor was greater within each individual risk strata than for the whole population. We show two examples of the paradoxes and analyse the possible causes. The key cause of bias is use of the same prediction model as for both stratifying the population, and as the base model to which the new predictor is added
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See moreRisk prediction models are potentially useful tools for health practitioners and policy makers. When new predictors are proposed to add to existing models, the improvement of discrimination is one of the main measures to assess any increment in performance. In assessing such predictors, we observed two paradoxes: 1) the discriminative ability within all individual risk strata was worse than for the overall population; 2) incremental discrimination after including a new predictor was greater within each individual risk strata than for the whole population. We show two examples of the paradoxes and analyse the possible causes. The key cause of bias is use of the same prediction model as for both stratifying the population, and as the base model to which the new predictor is added
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Date
2022Source title
F1000ResearchPublisher
Taylor and FrancisLicence
Creative Commons Attribution 4.0Faculty/School
Faculty of Medicine and Health, Sydney School of Public HealthShare