Miscellaneous: Biostatistics
Biostatistics
Statistics of a Set of Values
- Mean: The Average of Set of Values
- Median: The Numerically Middle Number of a Set of Values
- Mode: The Most Commonly Repeated Number of a Set of Values
- Range: The Difference Between the Highest & Lowest Numbers of a Set of Values
- Standard Deviation: A Measure of the Amount of Variance in a Set of Values
- Percent of the Population within One Standard Deviation of the Mean: 68.27%
- Percent of the Population within Two Standard Deviation of the Mean: 95.45%
- Percent of the Population within Three Standard Deviation of the Mean: 99.73%
Statistics of Disease Within a Population
- Prevalence: Number of People with a Disease at a Given Time
- Incidence: Number of New Cases of a Disease Over a Given Period of Time
Statistics of Test Performance
- Values:
- True Positive: A Patient with a Disease Tests Positive
- False Negative: A Patient with a Disease Tests Negative
- False Positive: A Patient without a Disease Tests Positive
- True Negative: A Patient without a Disease Tests Negative
- Table Format:
Patient Has Disease | Patient Does Not Have Disease | |
Test Positive | True Positives (TP) | False Positives (FP) |
Test Negative | False Negatives (FN) | True Negatives (TN) |
- Tests:
- Sensitivity (Sn) = TP / (TP+FN)
- If You Have the Disease, what is the Chance the Test Is Positive?
- Specificity (Sp) = TN / (FP+TN)
- If You Do Not Have the Disease, what is the Chance the Test is Negative?
- Positive Predictive Value (PPV) = TP / (TP+FP)
- If the Test is Positive, what is the Chance You Have the Disease?
- Negative Predictive Value (NPV) = TN / (FN+TN)
- If the Test is Negative, what is the Chance You Do Not Have the Disease?
- Sensitivity (Sn) = TP / (TP+FN)
- Predictive Values (PPV & NPV) are Dependent on Prevalence in the Population Being Tested
- Populations with Increased Prevalence will Have Increased PPV & Decreased NPV
- Sensitivity & Specificity Are Not Affected by Prevalence
Statistics of Outcome
- Odds Ratio: Prevalence in Exposed Group / Prevalence in Unexposed Group
- Uses: Case Control
- Relative Risk = Incidence in Exposed Group / Incidence in Unexposed Group
- Uses: Cohort Study & Controlled Trials
- Generally the More Clinically Relevant Parameter Over Odds Ratio if Available
- Risk Reduction
- Absolute Risk Reduction = Control Rate – Experimental Rate
- Relative Risk Reduction = (Control Rate – Experimental Rate) / Control Rate
- Number Needed to Treat (NNT)
- The Number of Patients Needed to Treat to Prevent One Adverse Event
- NNT = 1/Absolute Risk Reduction
Correlation Coefficient (r)
- Measures the Strength of Relationship Between Two Variables
- Range: -1 to +1
- Negative Values: Negative Relationship (Inversely Proportional)
- Positive Values: Positive Relationship (Directly Proportional)
- Strength:
- 0: No Relationship
- 0.0-0.3: Negligible
- 0.3-0.5: Weak
- 0.5-0.7: Moderate
- 0.7-0.9: Strong
- 0.9-1.0: Very Strong