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Background: Several criteria have been used to assess agreement between replicate slide readings of malaria
parasite density. Such criteria may be based on percent difference, or absolute difference, or a combination.
Neither the rationale for choosing between these types of criteria, nor that for choosing the magnitude of
difference which defines acceptable agreement, are clear. The current paper seeks a procedure which avoids the
disadvantages of these current options and whose parameter values are more clearly justified.
Methods and Results: Variation of parasite density within a slide is expected, even when it has been prepared
from a homogeneous sample. This places lower limits on sensitivity and observer agreement, quantified by the
Poisson distribution. This means that, if a criterion of fixed percent difference criterion is used for satisfactory
agreement, the number of discrepant readings is over-estimated at low parasite densities. With a criterion of fixed
absolute difference, the same happens at high parasite densities. For an ideal slide, following the Poisson
distribution, a criterion based on a constant difference in square root counts would apply for all densities. This can
be back-transformed to a difference in absolute counts, which, as expected, gives a wider range of acceptable
agreement at higher average densities. In an example dataset from Tanzania, observed differences in square root
counts correspond to a 95% limits of agreement of -2,800 and +2,500 parasites/μl at average density of 2,000
parasites/μl, and -6,200 and +5,700 parasites/μl at 10,000 parasites/μl. However, there were more outliers beyond
those ranges at higher densities, meaning that actual coverage of these ranges was not a constant 95%, but
decreased with density. In a second study, a trial of microscopist training, the corresponding ranges of agreement
are wider and asymmetrical: -8,600 to +5,200/μl, and -19,200 to +11,700/μl, respectively. By comparison, the
optimal limits of agreement, corresponding to Poisson variation, are ± 780 and ± 1,800 parasites/μl, respectively.
The focus of this approach on the volume of blood read leads to other conclusions. For example, no matter how
large a volume of blood is read, some densities are too low to be reliably detected, which in turn means that
disagreements on slide positivity may simply result from within-slide variation, rather than reading errors.
Conclusions: The proposed method defines limits of acceptable agreement in a way which allows for the natural
increase in variability with parasite density. This includes defining the levels of between-reader variability, which are
consistent with random variation: disagreements within these limits should not trigger additional readings. This
approach merits investigation in other settings, in order to determine both the extent of its applicability, and
appropriate numerical values for limits of agreement. |
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