Meta-Analysis of Diagnostic Accuracy Studies With Multiple Thresholds

  • Antonia Zapf
  • Cornelia Frömke
  • Juliane Hardt
  • Gerta Rücker
  • Dina Voeltz (Shared last author)
  • Annika Hoyer (Shared last author)

Abstract

The development of methods for the meta-analysis of diagnostic test accuracy (DTA) studies is still an active area of research. While methods for the standard case where each study reports a single pair of sensitivity and specificity are nearly routinely applied nowadays, methods to meta-analyze receiver operating characteristic (ROC) curves are not widely used. This situation is more complex, as each primary DTA study may report on several pairs of sensitivity and specificity, each corresponding to a different threshold. In a case study published earlier, we applied a number of methods for meta-analyzing DTA studies with multiple thresholds to a real-world data example (Zapf et al., Biometrical Journal. 2021; 63(4): 699-711). To date, no simulation study exists that systematically compares different approaches with respect to their performance in various scenarios when the truth is known. In this article, we aim to fill this gap and present the results of a simulation study that compares three frequentist approaches for the meta-analysis of ROC curves. We performed a systematic simulation study, motivated by an example from medical research. In the simulations, all three approaches worked partially well. The approach by Hoyer and colleagues was slightly superior in most scenarios and is recommended in practice.

Bibliographical data

Original languageEnglish
Article numbere202300101
ISSN0323-3847
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 10.2024

Comment Deanary

© 2024 The Author(s). Biometrical Journal published by Wiley‐VCH GmbH.

PubMed 39330620