reviewAmerican Journal of EpidemiologyApr 22, 2004Closed access

Limitations of the Odds Ratio in Gauging the Performance of a Diagnostic, Prognostic, or Screening Marker

Fred Hutch Cancer Center

PubMed
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Abstract

A marker strongly associated with outcome (or disease) is often assumed to be effective for classifying persons according to their current or future outcome. However, for this assumption to be true, the associated odds ratio must be of a magnitude rarely seen in epidemiologic studies. In this paper, an illustration of the relation between odds ratios and receiver operating characteristic curves shows, for example, that a marker with an odds ratio of as high as 3 is in fact a very poor classification tool. If a marker identifies 10% of controls as positive (false positives) and has an odds ratio of 3, then it will correctly identify only 25% of cases as positive (true positives). The authors illustrate that a…

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Topics & keywords

Keywords
  • Odds ratio
  • Diagnostic odds ratio
  • Odds
  • Logistic regression
  • Receiver operating characteristic
  • False positive paradox
  • Medicine
  • Confidence interval
UN Sustainable Development Goals
  • Good health and well-being
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