On 2014 Jul 12, David Keller commented:
The USPSTF statement confuses sensitivity and specificity
The following error appears in the USPSTF Recommendation statement posted on their own website (1) as well as in the identical document published online by Annals of Internal Medicine (2):
"Although screening with ultrasonography has few direct harms, all screening strategies, including those with or without confirmatory tests (that is, digital subtraction or magnetic resonance angiography), have imperfect sensitivity and could lead to unnecessary surgery and result in serious harms, including death, stroke, and myocardial infarction."
Correction: The author meant to write that these screening tests "have imperfect specificity, and could lead to unnecessary surgery..."
Rationale: Imperfect specificity is defined as a rate of false-positive test results greater than zero, which can lead to a diagnosis of disease which does not exist, and hence to unnecessary surgery. In contrast, imperfect sensitivity is defined as a rate of true-positive test results less than 100%, which does not lead to unnecessary surgery - but it can lead to the opposite kind of harm, which is a missed diagnosis, which can lead to the failure to perform necessary surgery.
The correct use of these terms, and the distinction between their definitions, is important in any discussion of public health measures.
The erroneous word was bolded by this commentator.
9/22/2014: As of today, the above error remains uncorrected on both the USPSTF and Annals websites. I have notified the editor of Annals by email. I encourage readers to submit their comments regarding this error to USPSTF, Annals, and PubMed Commons.
11/9/2014: As of today, the above error remains uncorrected on the Annals of Internal Medicine website. However, it has been corrected on the USPSTF website, at the following new web address:
I will again attempt to have it corrected by the editors of Annals.
12/26/2014: I exchange emails with the editor-in-chief of Annals, who assures me that the matter will be looked into.
1/21/2015: A recheck of the Annals website discloses that the error has been corrected, and now reads "Although screening with ultrasonography has few direct harms, all screening strategies, including those with or without confirmatory tests (that is, digital subtraction or magnetic resonance angiography), have imperfect sensitivity and specificity and could lead to unnecessary surgery and result in serious harms, including death, stroke and MI".
To date, I have received no acknowledgement or thanks for pointing out the above error, from either the USPSTF or from Annals. This is the typical response I have received when correcting errors, including other, more serious errors in JAMA and the NEJM, which were eventually corrected after I expended almost preposterous efforts. Errors in the scientific literature can propagate unless corrected, leading to further errors. The NIH should establish an impartial board of experts, to whom outstanding errors in PubMed-indexed publications can be appealed, in cases where readers have spotted significant errors and the responsible editors refuse to correct them.
References
1: U.S. Preventative Services Task Force website, accessed on 7/12/2014, search for the second instance of "imperfect sensitivity" http://www.uspreventiveservicestaskforce.org/uspstf13/cas/casfinalrs.htm
2: Annals of Internal Medicine website, accessed on 7/12/2014, search for the second instance of "imperfect sensitivity" http://annals.org/article.aspx?articleid=1886690
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