<div><p>Ruling out disease often requires expensive or potentially harmful confirmation testing. For such testing, a less invasive triage test is often used. Intuitively, few negative confirmatory tests suggest success of this approach. However, if negative confirmation tests become too rare, too many disease cases could have been missed. It is therefore important to know how many negative tests are needed to safely exclude a diagnosis. We quantified this relationship using Bayes’ theorem, and applied this to the example of pulmonary embolism (PE), for which triage is done with a Clinical Decision Rule (CDR) and D-dimer testing, and CT-angiography (CTA) is the confirmation test. For a maximum proportion of missed PEs of 1% in triage-negativ...
Identical diagnostic algorithms for suspected pulmonary embolism (PE) are used for hospitalized pati...
Background Computed tomography pulmonary angiography (CTPA) is frequently requested using diagnostic...
Background: Evidence suggests the potential overuse of computed tomography pulmonary angiography (CT...
Ruling out disease often requires expensive or potentially harmful confirmation testing. For such te...
Introduction: The American College of Emergency Physicians guidelines recommend more aggressive work...
Patients with suspected angina often undergo a variety of noninvasive tests to confirm or exclude th...
Introduction Combined with patient history and physical examination, a negative D-dimer can safely r...
Importance: In patients with suspected pulmonary embolism (PE), overuse of diagnostic imaging is an...
In patients with suspected pulmonary embolism (PE), overuse of diagnostic imaging is an important po...
For rare diseases, people tend to intuitively overestimate the probability of being sick after havin...
BackgroundAn unlikely' clinical decision rule with a negative D-dimer result safely excludes pulmona...
Establishing an accurate diagnosis is crucial in everyday clinical practice. It forms the starting p...
BACKGROUND: Increasing the threshold to define a positive D-dimer could reduce unnecessary computed ...
Identical diagnostic algorithms for suspected pulmonary embolism (PE) are used for hospitalized pati...
Background Computed tomography pulmonary angiography (CTPA) is frequently requested using diagnostic...
Background: Evidence suggests the potential overuse of computed tomography pulmonary angiography (CT...
Ruling out disease often requires expensive or potentially harmful confirmation testing. For such te...
Introduction: The American College of Emergency Physicians guidelines recommend more aggressive work...
Patients with suspected angina often undergo a variety of noninvasive tests to confirm or exclude th...
Introduction Combined with patient history and physical examination, a negative D-dimer can safely r...
Importance: In patients with suspected pulmonary embolism (PE), overuse of diagnostic imaging is an...
In patients with suspected pulmonary embolism (PE), overuse of diagnostic imaging is an important po...
For rare diseases, people tend to intuitively overestimate the probability of being sick after havin...
BackgroundAn unlikely' clinical decision rule with a negative D-dimer result safely excludes pulmona...
Establishing an accurate diagnosis is crucial in everyday clinical practice. It forms the starting p...
BACKGROUND: Increasing the threshold to define a positive D-dimer could reduce unnecessary computed ...
Identical diagnostic algorithms for suspected pulmonary embolism (PE) are used for hospitalized pati...
Background Computed tomography pulmonary angiography (CTPA) is frequently requested using diagnostic...
Background: Evidence suggests the potential overuse of computed tomography pulmonary angiography (CT...