Home
Scholarly Works
Discrimination and Calibration of Clinical...
Journal article

Discrimination and Calibration of Clinical Prediction Models: Users’ Guides to the Medical Literature

Abstract

Accurate information regarding prognosis is fundamental to optimal clinical care. The best approach to assess patient prognosis relies on prediction models that simultaneously consider a number of prognostic factors and provide an estimate of patients' absolute risk of an event. Such prediction models should be characterized by adequately discriminating between patients who will have an event and those who will not and by adequate calibration ensuring accurate prediction of absolute risk. This Users' Guide will help clinicians understand the available metrics for assessing discrimination, calibration, and the relative performance of different prediction models. This article complements existing Users' Guides that address the development and validation of prediction models. Together, these guides will help clinicians to make optimal use of existing prediction models.

Authors

Alba AC; Agoritsas T; Walsh M; Hanna S; Iorio A; Devereaux PJ; McGinn T; Guyatt G

Journal

JAMA: The Journal of the American Medical Association, Vol. 318, No. 14, pp. 1377–1384

Publisher

American Medical Association (AMA)

Publication Date

October 10, 2017

DOI

10.1001/jama.2017.12126

ISSN

0098-7484

Contact the Experts team