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THE POWER OF ERROR DETECTION OF WESTGARD MULTI-RULES: A RE-EVALUATION

THE POWER OF ERROR DETECTION OF WESTGARD MULTI-RULES: A RE-EVALUATION. Graham Jones Department of Chemical Pathology St Vincent’s Hospital, Sydney. Background. Westgard multi-rules are claimed to increase the power of error detection of laboratory QC procedures.

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THE POWER OF ERROR DETECTION OF WESTGARD MULTI-RULES: A RE-EVALUATION

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  1. AACB ASM 2003 THE POWER OF ERROR DETECTION OF WESTGARD MULTI-RULES: A RE-EVALUATION Graham Jones Department of Chemical Pathology St Vincent’s Hospital, Sydney

  2. AACB ASM 2003 Background • Westgard multi-rules are claimed to increase the power of error detection of laboratory QC procedures. • Power Function Charts can quantify the ability of these rules to detect changes in assay performance. • Examples of Power Function Charts are available on the Westgard QC website (www.westgard.com) • In this poster I re-evaluate the power of error detection of QC rules which require data from more than one QC run (Multi-run rules).

  3. AACB ASM 2003 Hypothesis • That the correct model for assessing the Power of Error Detection for multi-run QC rules should only show benefit for these rules if the error has not already been detected in QC runs required to gather data for those rules. • This hypothesis was modelled and compared to data on the Westgard website.

  4. AACB ASM 2003 Nomenclature • Single-run rules • All data is contained in a single QC run • For n=2 includes 13s and 22s • For n=4 includes 13s and 22s and 41s • Multi-Run Rules • Requires data from more than one QC run • For n=2 includes 41s and 10x • For n=4 includes 8x

  5. AACB ASM 2003 Methods • Power Function Charts were produced using a Microsoft Excel spreadsheet. • QC results were simulated using a random number generator with a normal distribution. • Changes in bias were modelled by adding various constants to the output. • QC rules were evaluated by the frequency with which they were triggered at changes in bias. • Westgard multi-rules with n=2 were evaluated for bias detection: 13s/22s/41s/10x. • Changes in random error were not modelled.

  6. AACB ASM 2003 Hypothesis - Graphical Display This display uses 10x as an example of a multi-run rule +3SD +2SD Mean -2SD 1 2 3 4 5 -3SD Change in assay bias QC run - within-run rules evaluate performance (13s/22s) QC run - within-run rules evaluate performance (13s/22s) - multi-run rule evaluates performance (10x across both materials) - Only adds benefit if shift NOT detected by QC events 1-4

  7. AACB ASM 2003 Results A Graph A - Original data from Westgard website B Probability for Rejection Graph B - Model of data from Westgard website. - Multi-run rules fire even if shift would have been detected previously. Shift in Bias (multiples of SD)

  8. AACB ASM 2003 C Graph C - Westgard data adjusted for hypothesis. - Multi-run Rules fire only if shift would NOT have been detected previously. Probability for Rejection D Graph D - Model of individual rules from Graph C - Multi-run Rules fire only if shift would NOT have been detected previously. Shift in Bias (multiples of SD) Shifts detected with 90% certainty from full multi-rules Shifts detected with 90% certainty from within-run rules.

  9. AACB ASM 2003 Results • A power Function Chart from the Westgard website showing multi-rules for bias detection with n=2 is shown in graph A. • The change in bias which Westgard claims full Multi-rules can detect with 90% certainty is about 2.0 times the SD of the assay (Graph A). • My model of the Westgard data, with multi-run rules triggered even if the change in bias would been previously detected, agrees well with the website data (Graph B). • In the Westgard model the multi-run rules (10x and 41s) enhance the error detection over the within-run rules (graphs A and B)

  10. AACB ASM 2003 • The model excluding multi-run rules when a shift would have been detected previously is shown in Graph C. • When these previously-detected shifts are removed from the data, the assay bias which can be detected with 90% certainty is reduced to about 3.3 times the assay SD (Graph C). • With this model the multi-run rules do not add to the within-run rules for confident error detection. • When the individual rules are plotted it can been seen that the multi-run rules never add to the error detection with 90% certainty. • The multi-run rules can be considered warning rules.

  11. AACB ASM 2003 Conclusion • The multi-run rules, as described on the Westgard website, give a falsely low estimate of the change in bias which can be detected with 90% certainty. • The 10x and 41s rules add little to the overall error detection at the 90% confidence level with 2 QC samples per run. • Multi-run rules are similarly non-contributory with 4 QC samples per run (data not shown).

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