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Diagnostic Measurements Primer

Diagnostic Measurements Primer unravels the importance of direct and indirect measurements and their vital role in obtaining regulatory approval. This class begins with the art of constructing and reading a standard curve to determine unknown analyte concentrations. The agenda extends to testing accuracy, focusing on the ins and outs of specificity, sensitivity, false positives/false negatives, and true positives/true negatives. These concepts are reinforced with a graphics exercise on distributions, exploring the varied factors contributing to data variability and bi-modal distribution. This class ends with two real-world case studies critiquing data from mammography for breast cancer and PSA diagnostics for prostate cancer. Learn what it takes to secure diagnostic approval by learning acceptable measurement thresholds. Register today!

Non-CPE Credit

CPE Credit

Section 1: Introduction to Measurements

Introduces the concept of measurements and discusses the process of producing, using and interpreting a standard curve when attempting to determine the results of a diagnostic test.

Section 2: Variability of Measurements

Explains how a diagnostic’s variability measurements determine if a patient falls into a normal or abnormal distribution for a disease.

Section 3: Examples of Test Distributions

Discover the relationship between blood pressure, cholesterol, and atherosclerotic disease, exploring the concept of bi-modal distribution and the ideal distribution of these health indicators.

Section 4: Testing Accuracy

Gain insights into measurement considerations, accuracy, false positives, false negatives, specificity, sensitivity, and predictive values, illustrated with examples such as mammography for breast cancer and PSA diagnostics for prostate cancer.

Five Takeaways

 

  1. Produce and interpret a standard curve to analyze a diagnostic’s results.
  2. Recognize types of data distributions and how each is used to determine if a patient’s
    condition falls in the normal or abnormal range.
  3. Explain how precision, bias, specificity, and sensitivity measurements determine the accuracy of a diagnostic.
  4. Discuss how false positive and false negative percentages and their comparison to the reference product determine regulatory approval for a novel diagnostic.
  5. Choose the correct measurement to determine a patient’s disease state.

Features

  • Closed Captioning in English, Spanish, French, French Canadian, Hindi, Japanese, Korean, Mandarin, Russian, Standard Arabic
  • Transcripts in English, Spanish, French, French Canadian, Hindi, Japanese, Korean, Mandarin, Russian, Standard Arabic
  • Course materials
  • Real-time tracking
  • Progress reporting
  • Accessibility features
  • Corporate account upgrades
  • LinkedIn certificate attachment
  • Verified certificates

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