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Assessing Biases in the Evaluation of Classification Assays for HIV Infection Recency

Identifying recent HIV infection cases has important public health and clinical implications. It is essential for estimating incidence rates to monitor epidemic trends and evaluate the effectiveness of interventions. Detecting recent cases is also important for HIV prevention given the crucial role...

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Autores principales: Patterson-Lomba, Oscar, Wu, Julia W., Pagano, Marcello
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2015
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4593552/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/26436915
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0139735
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author Patterson-Lomba, Oscar
Wu, Julia W.
Pagano, Marcello
author_facet Patterson-Lomba, Oscar
Wu, Julia W.
Pagano, Marcello
author_sort Patterson-Lomba, Oscar
collection PubMed
description Identifying recent HIV infection cases has important public health and clinical implications. It is essential for estimating incidence rates to monitor epidemic trends and evaluate the effectiveness of interventions. Detecting recent cases is also important for HIV prevention given the crucial role that recently infected individuals play in disease transmission, and because early treatment onset can improve the clinical outlook of patients while reducing transmission risk. Critical to this enterprise is the development and proper assessment of accurate classification assays that, based on cross-sectional samples of viral sequences, help determine infection recency status. In this work we assess some of the biases present in the evaluation of HIV recency classification algorithms that rely on measures of within-host viral diversity. Particularly, we examine how the time since infection (TSI) distribution of the infected subjects from which viral samples are drawn affect performance metrics (e.g., area under the ROC curve, sensitivity, specificity, accuracy and precision), potentially leading to misguided conclusions about the efficacy of classification assays. By comparing the performance of a given HIV recency assay using six different TSI distributions (four simulated TSI distributions representing different epidemic scenarios, and two empirical TSI distributions), we show that conclusions about the overall efficacy of the assay depend critically on properties of the TSI distribution. Moreover, we demonstrate that an assay with high overall classification accuracy, mainly due to properly sorting members of the well-represented groups in the validation dataset, can still perform notoriously poorly when sorting members of the less represented groups. This is an inherent issue of classification and diagnostics procedures that is often underappreciated. Thus, this work underscores the importance of acknowledging and properly addressing evaluation biases when proposing new HIV recency assays.
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spelling pubmed-45935522015-10-14 Assessing Biases in the Evaluation of Classification Assays for HIV Infection Recency Patterson-Lomba, Oscar Wu, Julia W. Pagano, Marcello PLoS One Research Article Identifying recent HIV infection cases has important public health and clinical implications. It is essential for estimating incidence rates to monitor epidemic trends and evaluate the effectiveness of interventions. Detecting recent cases is also important for HIV prevention given the crucial role that recently infected individuals play in disease transmission, and because early treatment onset can improve the clinical outlook of patients while reducing transmission risk. Critical to this enterprise is the development and proper assessment of accurate classification assays that, based on cross-sectional samples of viral sequences, help determine infection recency status. In this work we assess some of the biases present in the evaluation of HIV recency classification algorithms that rely on measures of within-host viral diversity. Particularly, we examine how the time since infection (TSI) distribution of the infected subjects from which viral samples are drawn affect performance metrics (e.g., area under the ROC curve, sensitivity, specificity, accuracy and precision), potentially leading to misguided conclusions about the efficacy of classification assays. By comparing the performance of a given HIV recency assay using six different TSI distributions (four simulated TSI distributions representing different epidemic scenarios, and two empirical TSI distributions), we show that conclusions about the overall efficacy of the assay depend critically on properties of the TSI distribution. Moreover, we demonstrate that an assay with high overall classification accuracy, mainly due to properly sorting members of the well-represented groups in the validation dataset, can still perform notoriously poorly when sorting members of the less represented groups. This is an inherent issue of classification and diagnostics procedures that is often underappreciated. Thus, this work underscores the importance of acknowledging and properly addressing evaluation biases when proposing new HIV recency assays. Public Library of Science 2015-10-05 /pmc/articles/PMC4593552/ /pubmed/26436915 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0139735 Text en © 2015 Patterson-Lomba et al http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are properly credited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Patterson-Lomba, Oscar
Wu, Julia W.
Pagano, Marcello
Assessing Biases in the Evaluation of Classification Assays for HIV Infection Recency
title Assessing Biases in the Evaluation of Classification Assays for HIV Infection Recency
title_full Assessing Biases in the Evaluation of Classification Assays for HIV Infection Recency
title_fullStr Assessing Biases in the Evaluation of Classification Assays for HIV Infection Recency
title_full_unstemmed Assessing Biases in the Evaluation of Classification Assays for HIV Infection Recency
title_short Assessing Biases in the Evaluation of Classification Assays for HIV Infection Recency
title_sort assessing biases in the evaluation of classification assays for hiv infection recency
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4593552/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/26436915
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0139735
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