Patients with an acute myocardial infarction (used as an illustrative application)
Seven-step framework for development and ABCD framework for validation of clinical prediction models
30-day mortality (in the application example)
Provides a structured methodological framework (seven steps for development and ABCD for validation) to improve the rigor and quality of clinical prediction models in cardiovascular research.
Clinical prediction models provide risk estimates for the presence of disease (diagnosis) or an event in the future course of disease (prognosis) for individual patients. Although publications that present and evaluate such models are becoming more frequent, the methodology is often suboptimal. We propose that seven steps should be considered in developing prediction models: (i) consideration of the research question and initial data inspection; (ii) coding of predictors; (iii) model specification; (iv) model estimation; (v) evaluation of model performance; (vi) internal validation; and (vii) model presentation. The validity of a prediction model is ideally assessed in fully independent data, where we propose four key measures to evaluate model performance: calibration-in-the-large, or the model intercept (A); calibration slope (B); discrimination, with a concordance statistic (C); and clinical usefulness, with decision-curve analysis (D). As an application, we develop and validate prediction models for 30-day mortality in patients with an acute myocardial infarction. This illustrates the usefulness of the proposed framework to strengthen the methodological rigour and quality for prediction models in cardiovascular research.
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Ewout W. Steyerberg
Yvonne Vergouwe
European Heart Journal
Erasmus MC
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Steyerberg et al. (Wed,) studied this question.
www.synapsesocial.com/papers/69d6c9e0f174babf6cab389d — DOI: https://doi.org/10.1093/eurheartj/ehu207
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