Title: Slides supporting chapter 6 of the book:
1Slides supporting chapter 6 of the book Bhopal
R S. Concepts of Epidemiology. Oxford, Oxford
University Press, 2002, pp317 http//www.oup.co.uk
/isbn/0-19-263155-1
2Natural history, spectrum, iceberg, population
patterns and screening interrelated concepts in
the epidemiology of disease Raj Bhopal, Bruce
and John Usher Professor of Public Health,
Public Health Sciences Section, Division of
Community Health Sciences,University of
Edinburgh, Edinburgh EH89AGRaj.Bhopal_at_ed.ac.uk
3Educational objectives
- On completion of your studies you should
understand - That the natural history of disease is the
unchecked progression of disease in an
individual. - Natural history ranks alongside causal
understanding in importance for the prevention
and control of disease. - The technical and ethical challenges posed in
elucidating the natural history of disease are
great. - That the changing pattern of disease in
populations over time and the spectrum of the
presentation of disease are related yet separate
concepts.
4Educational objectives
- That the iceberg of disease is a metaphor
emphasising that for virtually every health
problem the number of cases of disease
ascertained (those visible) is outweighed by
those not discovered (those invisible). - How the iceberg of disease phenomenon thwarts
assessment of the true burden of disease, the
need for services and the selection of
representative cases for epidemiological study. - Screening is the application of tests to diagnose
disease (or its precursors) in an earlier phase
of the natural history of disease (often in well
people) than is achieved in routine medical
practice. - The key to successful screening is a simple test
which can be applied to large populations with
minimum harm and has a high degree of accuracy. - The potential of screening is vast but there are
important limitations.
5Natural history of disease class exercise
- This is the uninterrupted progression in an
individual of the disease from the moment of
exposure to the causal agents. - Reflect on the four major possible outcomes in an
individual of exposure to a causal agent.
6Natural history responses
- First, the exposure may have no discernible
effect. - Second, there may be demonstrable damaging effect
of the exposure which may be repaired. - Third, the effect may be an illness that is
rapidly contained by the body's defence
mechanism. - Finally, the illness may progress until it leads
to continuing long term problems, irreversible
damage or death. - The outcome will depend on the interactions of
host, agent and environmental factors.
7Natural history graphic representation
- Figure 6.1 provides an idealised view of the
concept. - The same concept can be applied to individual
diseases. - Tuberculosis provides an excellent example, which
is illustrated in figure 6.2. - Figure 6.3 shows a typical path for the natural
history of CHD.
8Figure 6.1
9Figure 6.5
10Figure 6.3
Recurrence and death
Disease and first manifestation can be diagnosed
here, eg. MI
Causes begin to exert their influence here
11Obstacles to studying the natural history of
disease
- Information on natural history is very hard to
obtain. - What difficulties can you see in studying the
true natural history of disease? - Would you be willing to participate in a natural
history study? - What might be the effect on you of being in such
a study?
12Natural history studies consequences
- First, the mere act of diagnosis and follow-up by
a physician may initiate changes in the disease
process. - Second, the scientific objective of observing the
natural history of disease clashes with the
ethical medical imperative to act to alleviate,
contain or treat the disease. - Studies of the natural history of disease are
potentially ethically explosive e.g the US Public
Health Services Tuskegee syphilis study, where
600 "negro" men with syphilis in the state of
Alabama in the USA were followed up for a period
of about 40 years. - Follow up, or cohort, studies are needed to
define the natural history of disease and such
long-term observations may prove costly or
impossible. - Natural history is, therefore, usually pieced
together from a mixture of observations.
13Natural history and incubation period
- Time between exposure to the agent and the
development of disease is called the incubation
period. - Diseases that have long incubation periods
generally have a long clinical course and, if so,
by convention they are called chronic diseases. - Some chronic diseases, paradoxically, lead to
sudden and unexpected death e.g. a stroke or
heart attack. - The label chronic disease is based on the natural
history as defined in many individuals.
14Natural history and incubation period
- Diseases with a short incubation period usually
have a short course, and by convention are known
as acute diseases. - These include most infections and many toxic
disorders. - The effects of acute disease may also be severe
and prolonged, eg post-viral syndromes. - The incubation period, together with minimal
clinical information of the nature of the illness
(e.g. a rash and fever), may be sufficient to
identify the disease.
15Natural history applications
- Natural history is vital for disease prevention
policies. - It underlies secondary prevention based on
screening - It provides a rationale for all health care.
- Purpose of health care, including medicine, is to
influence the natural history of disease by
reducing and delaying ill-health. - When achieved through deliberate actions by
societies the collective endeavour is public
health.
16Figure 6.4
17The population pattern of disease
- Natural history of disease should not be (but is)
confused with the changing pattern of disease in
populations. - The distribution of a disease across
socio-economic groups may change as it has for
coronary heart disease. - I call this the Population pattern of disease
- Main measures of PPOD are the disease incidence
and prevalence.
18Interrelationship between natural history and
population pattern of disease exercise
- Assuming there are no changes to exposure to the
causal agent, what effect would changing the
natural history have on the population pattern?
Consider, for example, the effect of - Reduced and enhanced susceptibility
- A shorter or longer course of disease
- A longer and shorter incubation period
- A more severe or less severe disease
19Changing natural history and population pattern
of disease
- Reducing the population's susceptibility would
diminish the number of cases of overt, diagnosed
disease. - If the changes in susceptibility were uneven
across a population, there will be other changes
in the PPOD too, e.g. the reversal of
inequalities in CHD. - A shorter course is also likely to have a better
outcome, with less long-term morbidity so a lower
prevalence, or lower mortality. - If the incubation period lengthens in a chronic
disease from 20 to 30 years, then the disease
burden will decline, at least in the short-term. - The idea that an exposure can lead to variants
(and varying severity) of the same disease is the
spectrum of disease.
20Spectrum of disease
- Disease may present with varying signs, symptoms
and severity. - Tuberculosis is another particularly good example
and as illustrated in table 6.1. - The spectrum of disease is, primarily, a
population concept (while natural history is
primarily a concept relating to individuals). - Diseases may be mild or even silent -one of
the many explanations for undiagnosed disease in
the community. - This phenomenon is described by the metaphor of
the iceberg of disease.
21The unmeasured burden of disease the metaphors
of the iceberg and the pyramid
- For most health problems there are large numbers
of undiscovered or misdiagnosed cases of disease.
- Serious and killing disorders such as diabetes,
atrial fibrillation and hypertension are other
good examples of this iceberg phenomenon. - Cases that have been correctly diagnosed can be
likened to the tip of the iceberg, visible and
easily measured.
22Iceberg/pyramid of disease
- In most diseases, as with the iceberg, the larger
presence lurks unseen, unmeasured and easily
forgotten. - Figure 6.6 illustrates this idea and develops the
iceberg concept in the form of a pyramid of
disease by using its clear structure and shape. - Blocks 1 and 2 correspond to the iceberg above
the sea-level and 3 to 5 below sea level. - Epidemiology that forgets the iceberg phenomenon
of disease Is weak and potentially misleading.
23Figure 6.6 The pyramid and iceberg of disease
24Iceberg/pyramid of disease
- Unidentified cases may be different to identified
ones, both in terms of the natural history or
spectrum of disease. - Where symptoms and disease progression and
outcome are related, the undiagnosed cases are
likely to be less severe. - When symptoms and signs are not evident in the
early stages of disease, as in high blood
pressure or chronic glaucoma, undiagnosed cases
may be just as severe as diagnosed ones. - Epidemiological studies based on selected cases
from the tip of the iceberg may give an erroneous
view.
25Iceberg/pyramid severity of disease
- Prostate cancer based on cases diagnosed in
hospital would lead to the view that the disease
is usually, if not always, progressive. - Unselected cases show that prostatic cancer can
in some cases be a static, or slowly progressive,
phenomenon. - Patients who are at the tip of the iceberg are
more likely to have multiple health problems than
others. - People with cardio-respiratory problems and
diabetes are more likely to be admitted to
hospital, than people with only one of these two
problems. This is the basis of the bias known as
Berkson's bias.
26Screening
- Screening is the use of tests to help diagnose
diseases (or their precursor conditions) in an
earlier phase of their natural history or at the
less severe end of the spectrum than is achieved
in routine clinical practice. - Screening attempts to uncover the iceberg of
disease. - On the pyramid model in 6.7 screening is applied
to block 3, and less commonly, to block 4. - Aim is to reverse, halt or slow the progression
of disease. - Screening is also done to protect society.
- Screening may be done to select out unhealthy
people e.g. for a job. - Screening is sometimes done to help allocate
health care resources. - Screening may be done simply for research, for
example, to identify disease at an early stage to
help understand the natural history.
27Figure 6.7
28Screening ethics and limitations
- The ethical viewpoint, that the natural history
of disease must be influenced favourably, sets
limits on the scope of screening. - Screening could be done for every disease for
which there is a diagnostic test or diagnostic
signs and symptoms. - Criteria, usually variants of those of Wilson and
Jungner. - These can be crystallised as six questions
29Criteria for screening
- Is there an effective intervention?
- Does intervention earlier than usual improve
outcome? - Is there an effective screening test that
recognises disease earlier than usual? - Is the test available and acceptable to the
target population? - Is the disease one that commands priority?
- Do the benefits exceed the costs?
- If the answer to these six questions is yes then
the case for screening is sound
30Screening evaluating the case
- Screening programmes need more careful evaluation
than clinical care and we would make the case if
Wilson and Jungner's criteria are met as for
hypertension- - The benefits of screening for hypertension far
exceed the costs. - The screening test is measurement of the blood
pressure, usually using a sphygmomanometer. - The diagnostic test is, effectively, repetition
of the same test on several occasions combined
with a clinical history, examination and other
tests to check for other diseases, particularly
those that cause specific forms of hypertension. - Additional tests of high blood pressure are
possible but used infrequently, including 24-hour
readings using equipment that permits measurement
while the person is ambulatory.
31Screening hypertension
- The ideal test would pick up all cases of
hypertension in the population tested. This
attribute of the test is known as high
sensitivity (or true positive rate). - The ideal test would also correctly identify all
people who do not have the disease, that is, the
test is specific to those who have the disease
i.e. high specificity (or true negative rate). - When cases go for more detailed clinical
examination, the screening test result is
confirmed, so - A positive test predicts with accuracy the
presence of hypertension, and similarly a
negative test predicts its absence.
32Screening tests performance
- These four measures, sensitivity, specificity and
predictive power of a positive and negative test,
are the main way to assess the performance of a
screening test. - Measures of performance can be calculated from
the 2 x 2 table as shown in table 6.3. - As the definitive test is never 100 accurate.
- Screening test is being evaluated against another
imperfect, albeit better, test.
33The 2x2 table - validating the screening test
34Exercise Calculating sensitivity and
specificity, and predictive power
- 500 patients known to have a particular disease
were screened with a new test. - 500 controls without this disease were also
screened. - Of the 500 patients 473 had a positive test.
- Of the healthy group without the disease 7 had a
positive test. - Create a 2 x 2 table based on table 6.3 and
reflect on the interpretation of the data. - Calculate sensitivity and specificity of the
test. - Is this a good performance?
- What are the implications for those wrongly
classified by the test?
35Table 6.4 Calculation of sensitivity and
specificity based on data in box 6.4
36Sensitivity and specificity
- The sensitivity (94.6) and specificity (98.6)
of the test are very high. - The test will correctly identify most people who
have the disease and correctly identify most
people who are disease free. - About one person in twenty who does have the
disease will be misclassified as disease free. - Far fewer people without disease will be
misclassified as having the disease. - Individuals and their doctors who want to know
the implications of their individual results and
this is given by predictive power.
37Predictive Powers
- If a person is positive on the screening test and
asks what is his chance of having the disease
once all the tests are done, what can we advise?
- Similarly, what do we advise if the test is
negative on the screening test? - From table 6.4 calculate predictive powers.
38predictive powers and prevalence
- Predictive power of a positive test is a/ab
473/480 98.5 - and of a negative test is d/cd 493/520
94.8. - Only one or two percent of those testing positive
will have this result overturned by the
definitive test. - More of those with a negative test, however, will
have this result overturned. - The prevalence of the disease has a profound
effect on the predictive powers.
39Predictive powers
- Imagine that the prevalence of a disease is
actually zero. - Then all screening test positive cases must, of
necessity, be false positives. - If the prevalence of a condition is 100 then,
logically, all screen positive cases will have
the condition (and screen negatives will all be
false), so the predictive power of a positive
test is 100. - Most diseases are uncommon, so the predictive
power of a positive screening test tends to be
low.
40Figure 6.8
41sensitivity and specificity cut-off
- The sensitivity and specificity are, however,
profoundly affected by the "cut-off" value of the
measure at which a test is defined as positive. - This is a very difficult decision. How do we make
it? - For blood pressure, for example, we could take
any cut-off value that is associated with a
higher risk of disease. - This could mean a cut-off value less than 120/80
mmHg. - About half of the population would therefore be
defined as hypertensive. - For most people so defined the true additional
risk of disease would be very low. - At a cut-off of 180/120 few people would be
defined as hypertensive and for those that were
the target organ damage and incidence of disease
would be high. - We would miss people who are at risk with, say, a
blood pressure of 150/95 - There is a price to be paid for each choice of
cut-off point.
42Sensitivity and specificity setting the cut-off
value
- The underlying reason for the reciprocal nature
of the sensitivity and specificity is that, for
most diseases, cases and non-cases belong to one,
not separate distributions of values. - In figure 6.9(a) there are three distributions
which could be described as low, medium and high
blood pressure with varying levels of risk of
hypertensive end-organ disease. - Figure 6.9(b) shows a more realistic, so-called
bi-modal (two peak), distribution. - This type of distribution is not common but it
illustrates the idea behind screening. - Figure 6.9c, however, is the picture portraying
the distribution of the risk factors for many
common disorders. - No natural separation between people at risk of
disease and not at risk.
43Figure 6.9
44Sensitivity and specificity setting the cut-off
value
- Cut-off point is set solely on a judgement
balancing the importance of avoiding false
positives (achieving high specificity) versus
avoiding missing true positives (achieving high
sensitivity). - Screening will make blocks 1 and 2 in the pyramid
of disease (figure 6.7) grow and block 3 shrink.
- Danger is that through false positive tests
people in blocks 4 and 5 are wrongly placed in
blocks 1 and 2, and through false negative tests
people in blocks 1 and 2 are placed in blocks 4
and 5.
45Setting cut-off points
- Three actions are essential to help define the
cut-off point. - Understanding of the natural history of the
disease. - Weighing up the adverse consequences of
treatment. - Judgments on the required sensitivity,
specificity, and predictive powers of the
screening test in the population to be screened.
46Applications of the concepts of natural history,
spectrum and screening
- Health policy that has the objective to shift the
natural history of disease to the right and alter
the spectrum so disease is less severe. - Public health and medical action can be seen as
the force spearheading the attack against
ill-health and disease. - Knowledge of the natural history of disease can
radically alter the organisation of health care
so care is proactive. - Knowing the role of early life events in the
genesis of heart disease and diabetes alters
fundamentally our approach to these problems. - The need to influence the policies which foster
good education and health of mothers and their
infants is crystal clear. - The scientific rationale for health care agencies
to seek partnership with other agencies such as
education, housing and social services is overt - Cross-disciplinary working within health care
(primary health care, paediatrics, obstetrics,
nutrition and adult medicine) is seen as
essential.
47Applications of the concepts of natural history,
spectrum and screening
- Researchers studying people with disease now may
need to obtain information about the life
circumstances of the patient in childhood and
even in-utero (the fetal origins hypothesis). - Epidemiological methods are needed that help
people to recall information on causal factors. - New methods such as the life-grid approach where
questioning is linked to memorable life events. - Prospective epidemiological studies require
timescales measured in the same order of time as
the natural history of the disease. - The timing of prevention interventions .
- The iceberg of disease phenomenon requires that
health policy should be based on a realistic
estimate of the size of the unidentified
population of cases and those at risk.
48Epidemiological theory symbiosis with clinical
medicine and social sciences
- Theory that many diseases are initiated by events
acting years, or decades, before any clinical
manifestation. - Diseases may manifest themselves in many ways,
including asymptomatic yet damaging forms. - To understand why some people with symptoms and
signs of disease seek care, and hence are
diagnosed, while others do not, epidemiology
crosses to the social sciences, linking into
theories of illness seeking behaviour.
49Summary
- Natural history of disease is the uninterrupted
progression of disease from its initiation by
exposure to the causal agents to either
spontaneous resolution, containment by the bodys
repair mechanisms, or to a clinically detectable
problem. - The primary purpose of public health and medicine
is to influence favourably the natural history of
disease. - Natural history of disease is related to (and
influences) the changing pattern of disease in
populations or the different levels of severity
with which a disease may present (spectrum of
disease). - For most health problems the number of cases
identified is exceeded by those not discovered.
50Summary
- The iceberg phenomenon thwarts epidemiological
efforts to assess the true burden of disease. - It is impossible to identify truly unselected and
representative cases for epidemiological studies.
- Screening is the application of tests to diagnose
disease (or its precursors) in an earlier phase
of the natural history of disease (often in well
people) or in a less severe part of the disease
spectrum than is achieved in routine medical
practice. - These concepts are highly interrelated.