Neurology. 2012 Feb 8. [Epub ahead of print]
de la Fuente-Fernández R.
Abstract
OBJECTIVE:
To assess the role of DaTSCAN in the diagnosis of Parkinson disease (PD).
METHODS:
Using
the sensitivity and specificity values obtained in the 2 studies that
recently led the US Food and Drug Administration to approve the use of
DaTSCAN for the diagnosis of PD, calculations were carried out to
estimate the accuracy of the clinical diagnosis taking DaTSCAN findings
as the standard of truth.
RESULTS:
In early PD, a
clinical diagnosis of "possible" or "probable" PD has a sensitivity of
98% and a specificity of 67%. The specificity increases to 94% once the
clinical diagnosis becomes established. The overall accuracy of the
clinical diagnosis is 84% in early PD and 98% at later stages. The
clinical diagnostic accuracy is mathematically identical to the
diagnostic accuracy of DaTSCAN imaging.
CONCLUSIONS:
In
the absence of neuropathologic validation, the overall accuracy of a
clinical diagnosis of PD is very high and mathematically identical to
the accuracy of DaTSCAN imaging, which calls into question the use of
radiotracer neuroimaging as a diagnostic tool in clinical practice.
No comments:
Post a Comment