Alternative Referent Standards for Cardiac Normality

Implications for Diagnostic Testing

  1. ALAN ROZANSKI, M.D.;
  2. GEORGE A. DIAMOND, M.D.;
  3. JAMES S. FORRESTER, M.D.;
  4. DANIEL S. BERMAN, M.D.;
  5. DENISE MORRIS, B.S.; and
  6. H. J. C. SWAN, M.D., Ph.D.
  1. Los Angeles, California

    Abstract

    The radionuclide ventriculographic exercise response was evaluated in three patient populations representing alternative referent standards for cardiac normality: patients with normal coronary arteriograms, healthy volunteers, and uncatheterized patients with a low probability of coronary artery disease. Disease probability was determined by Bayesian analysis of age, sex, symptoms, and the results of cardiac fluoroscopy, exercise electrocardiography, or thallium scintigraphy. A wide range of ventriculographic responses was noted in the 62 catheterized normal patients; 21 (34%) had an abnormal ejection fraction response and 22 (35%) had an abnormal wall motion response. In contrast, the ejection fraction and wall motion responses were normal in the 9 volunteers. In 90 patients (18 catheterized and 72 uncatheterized) who had low disease probability ( < 1%), abnormal responses were rare; the ejection fraction response was abnormal in only 7% and the wall motion response was abnormal in 8%. Thus, these three populations are not equivalent referent standards of normality. Volunteers and patients with low disease probability provide too strict a standard, and their use can overestimate test specificity; catheterized normal patients, on the other hand, provide too lenient a standard, and their use can underestimate test specificity.

    Article and Author Information

    • ▸From the Division of Cardiology and Department of Nuclear Medicine, Cedars-Sinai Medical Center; and the Department of Medicine, UCLA School of Medicine; Los Angeles, California.

    • Grant support: in part by Specialized Center of Research Grant 17651 from the National Institutes of Health, and a Grant-in-Aid to Dr. Rozanski from the American Heart Association, Greater Los Angeles Affiliate, Inc.

    • ▸Requests for reprints should be addressed to Alan Rozanski, M.D.; Division of Cardiology, Cedars-Sinai Medical Center, 8700 Beverly Boulevard; Los Angeles, CA 90048.

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