Screening of Diseases
Screening of Diseases
Screening of Diseases
OF DISEASE
Dr. Bhuwan Sharma
Associate Professor
Department of Community Medicine
PIMS, Jalandhar
TIP OF THE ICEBERG
PHENOMENON
WHAT IS SCREENING?
Screening, in medicine, is a strategy used in a population to
identify the possible presence of an as-yet-undiagnosed
disease in individuals without signs of symptoms.
This can include individuals with pre-symptomatic or
unrecognized symptomatic disease. As such, screening tests are
somewhat unusual in that they are performed on persons
apparently in good health.
COMMON EXAMPLES
Cancer Screening
PAP smear to detect potentially precancerous lesions and prevent
cervical cancer
Mammography to detect breast cancer
Colonoscopy and fecal occult blood test to detect colorectal cancer
PSA to detect prostate cancer
Lead time: It is the advantage gained by screening i.e. the period between
early detection and diagnosis by other means
USES OF SCREENING
Case Detection: The presumptive identification of unrecognized
disease which doesn’t not arise from the patient's request but is done
for the patient's own benefit eg. Neonatal screening
Control of disease: This application of screening is to protect others
by diagnosing early the presence of a contagious disease
Research purposes: Screening aids in obtaining more basic
knowledge about the natural history of chronic diseases
Educational opportunities: Provide opportunities for creating public
awareness and for educating health professionals
TYPES OF SCREENING
Mass screening : Mass screening means, the screening of a whole
population or a subgroup. It is offered to all, irrespective of the risk
status of the individual.
High risk or selective screening : High risk screening is conducted
amongst populations at risk only. We may also screen for presence of
risk factors
Multiphasic screening : It is the application of two or more screening
tests to a large population at one time instead of carrying out separate
screening tests for single diseases. However no benefit has been
observed in morbidity and mortality
When done thoughtfully and based on research, identification of risk
factors can be a strategy for medical screening.
MASS SCREENING
Application of screening test to large, unselected population. Everyone in the group is
screened regardless of the probability of having the disease or condition.
Example:
Screening for visual defects in school children
Newborn screening program in Japan
Mammography screen in women aged 40 or less
Note: When mass screening was subject to critical review there appeared little to no
advantage for use in many instances
Indiscriminate screening therefore is not a useful and preventive measure unless it is
backed up by suitable treatment that will reduce the duration of illness or alter its final
outcome
HIGH RISK
SCREENING
Screening of selected high risk groups in the population.
Example:
Screening of HIV in high risk groups
Screening of Down’s syndrome in a baby with familial history of Down’s
syndrome
Screening for CA Cervix in low SES women
2.Repeatability
3.Validity
ACCEPTABILITY
Since a high rate of cooperation is necessary, it is important that the
test should be acceptable to the people at whom it is aimed.
In general the tests that are painful, discomforting or embarrassing are
not likely to be accepted by the population.
Eg
colonoscopy for cancer of colon
Night blood smear for testing of microfilariae
REPEATABILITY
Repeatability is the attribute of an ideal screening test.
The test must give consistent results on the same individual under the
same conditions.
The repeatability of the test depends on three factors:
Observer variation:
These are differences in observations made by same observers or
different observers.
Biological variation:
Physiological variables such as BP, blood sugar, serum
cholesterol etc. vary from person to person and time to time
The subject may experience symptoms differently as well
Errors due to technical methods:
OBSERVER VARIATION
Intra-observer variation:
“If a single observer takes two measurements (eg. Blood pressure) in the
same subject at the same time and each time obtained a different result.”
This variation can be avoided by taking the average of several replicate
measurements at the same time
Inter observer variation
“This variation between different observers on the same subject or material,
also known as between-observer variation”
eg. One observer finds malaria parasite in a blood smear while the other
observer is unable to
These variations can be decreased by –
1. Standardization of procedures
2. Intensive training of observers
3. Making use of two or more observers for independent assessment
BIOLOGICAL
VARIATION
There is a biological variability associated with many physiological variables
such as blood pressure, blood sugar etc.
These fluctuations are due to
Changes in the parameters observed:
Cervical smears obtained from women may be normal one day and abnormal
the next day
Variations in the way patients perceive their symptoms and answer:
This is a common subject variation. There may be errors in recollecting past
events in a questionnaire.
When the subject is aware he/she may not give correct information
Regression to the mean:
There is tendency for values at the extremes of a distribution i.e. very high or
very low regress to the mean or average on repeat measurements. Eg. Blood
pressure in hypertension.
This is very important to evaluating the effects of a specific drug to reduce
blood pressure.
TECHNICAL ERRORS
Repeatability may be effected by variations in the method. Eg:
Defective instruments
Erroneous calibration
Faulty reagents
Unreliable tests
Where these errors are large repeatability will be reduced and a single
test result may be unreliable.
VALIDITY
Validity or accuracy refers to the ability of the test to distinguish those
who have the disease from those who don’t
• ‘a’ - the individuals the number of individuals found positive on the test who have the
disease that’s being studied
• ‘b’ - those who have a positive test result but do not have the disease
• ‘c’ - those who have a negative test result but have the disease
• ‘d’ - those who have a negative test result and don’t have the disease
YIELD
Amount of previously unrecognized disease that is diagnosed as a
result of the screening effort. It depends upon many factors: