2x2 Contingency Table - The Grid Game

- Organizes diagnostic test results against the true disease status (gold standard).
- Rows: Test Result (Positive / Negative)
- Columns: Disease Status (Present / Absent)
- TP (True Positive): Sick people correctly identified as sick.
- FP (False Positive): Healthy people incorrectly identified as sick.
- FN (False Negative): Sick people incorrectly identified as healthy.
- TN (True Negative): Healthy people correctly identified as healthy.
⭐ Columns represent the truth (actual disease status), while rows represent the test's conclusion.
Sensitivity & Specificity - Trusting Your Test

- Sensitivity: Measures a test's ability to correctly identify patients with a disease. A highly sensitive test will capture most true cases.
- Formula: $Sensitivity = TP / (TP + FN)$
- 📌 SNOUT: High Sensitivity, when Negative, rules OUT disease. Ideal for screening.
- Specificity: Measures a test's ability to correctly identify people without a disease. A highly specific test will have few false positives.
- Formula: $Specificity = TN / (TN + FP)$
- 📌 SPIN: High Specificity, when Positive, rules IN disease. Ideal for confirmation.
⭐ These are fixed, intrinsic properties of a test, calculated vertically from the 2x2 table. They do not change with disease prevalence.
PPV & NPV - Patient Prediction Power
-
Positive Predictive Value (PPV): Probability that a + test result means the patient truly has the disease.
- Calculated from rows: $PPV = \frac{TP}{TP + FP}$
- Directly varies with prevalence: ↑ prevalence → ↑ PPV.
-
Negative Predictive Value (NPV): Probability that a - test result means the patient is truly disease-free.
- Calculated from rows: $NPV = \frac{TN}{TN + FN}$
- Inversely varies with prevalence: ↑ prevalence → ↓ NPV.

⭐ Unlike sensitivity/specificity, PPV & NPV are not intrinsic to the test. They are heavily influenced by the pre-test probability (prevalence) of the disease in the specific population being tested.
Prevalence & Predictive Values - The Prevalence Effect
- Prevalence: Proportion of a population with a disease at a given time.
- While Sensitivity & Specificity are fixed test characteristics, PPV & NPV are heavily influenced by prevalence.
- The Prevalence Effect:
- Prevalence ↑ → PPV ↑, NPV ↓
- Prevalence ↓ → PPV ↓, NPV ↑
- A test has a higher PPV in a high-prevalence population vs. a low-prevalence one.

⭐ In low-prevalence (e.g., general screening) settings, positive results have a lower PPV. In high-prevalence (e.g., symptomatic patient) settings, positive results have a much higher PPV.
Likelihood Ratios - Odds & Ends
- A measure of a test's diagnostic power, combining sensitivity and specificity. They are independent of prevalence.
- Positive Likelihood Ratio (LR+): How much the odds of disease increase with a positive test.
- $LR+ = sensitivity / (1 - specificity)$
- Negative Likelihood Ratio (LR-): How much the odds of disease decrease with a negative test.
- $LR- = (1 - sensitivity) / specificity$
- Interpretation:
- LR+ > 10 is strong evidence to rule IN.
- LR- < 0.1 is strong evidence to rule OUT.
⭐ Post-test odds can be calculated from pre-test odds and the likelihood ratio: Post-test odds = Pre-test odds × LR.
High‑Yield Points - ⚡ Biggest Takeaways
- Sensitivity is the True Positive Rate (TP / [TP+FN]); a high sensitivity test, when negative, rules out disease (SNOUT).
- Specificity is the True Negative Rate (TN / [TN+FP]); a high specificity test, when positive, rules in disease (SPIN).
- Screening tests for dangerous diseases require high sensitivity to avoid missing cases.
- Confirmatory tests need high specificity to ensure a positive result is truly a positive.
- Prevalence impacts PPV and NPV but not sensitivity or specificity.
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