A comparative study of three diagnostic criteria for atopic dermatitis

Objective To compare the specificity, sensitivity, variability and consistency among three different diagnostic criteria for atopic dermatitis (AD) in subjects with and without AD. Methods We retrospectively analyzed patients with AD initially diagnosed according to the Hanifin Rajka criteria at our...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Weijia ZHAO, Yuzhen LI
Format: Article
Language:zho
Published: editoiral office of Journal of Diagnosis and Therapy on Dermato-venereology 2023-04-01
Series:Pifu-xingbing zhenliaoxue zazhi
Subjects:
Online Access:http://pfxbzlx.gdvdc.com/EN/10.3969/j.issn.1674-8468.2023.02.005
_version_ 1797374018262663168
author Weijia ZHAO
Yuzhen LI
author_facet Weijia ZHAO
Yuzhen LI
author_sort Weijia ZHAO
collection DOAJ
description Objective To compare the specificity, sensitivity, variability and consistency among three different diagnostic criteria for atopic dermatitis (AD) in subjects with and without AD. Methods We retrospectively analyzed patients with AD initially diagnosed according to the Hanifin Rajka criteria at our clinic between September 2020 and October 2021. Demographic characteristics, clinical manifestations and the results of laboratory tests were used to analyze the sensitivity and specificity of Williams criteria, Zhang's criteria/Chinese criteria and Chinese diagnostic criteria for childhood AD. Patients with other dermatological diseases visiting our clinic during the same period were used as controls. The sensitivity and specificity of the three diagnostic criteria were compared using McNemar's test, while Kappa values were used to determine the consistency of the diagnostic criteria. Results One hundred and ten patients with AD and 91 patients without AD were included in this analysis. The highest sensitivity and lowest specificity were Chinese diagnostic criteria for childhood AD (83.6%, 59.3%). Both Zhang's criteria/Chinese criteria and Williams criterion displayed the highest specificity (90.1% for both). Both positive and negative predictive values (90.2%, 75.2%) were higher for Zhang's criteria/Chinese criteria than the others. The Williams criteria exhibited the highest false negative rate (29.1%), while the highest false positive rate was found for the Chinese diagnostic criteria for AD in children (40.7%). The Zhang's criteria/Chinese criteria displayed the highest Youden index and Kappa coefficient, with a Kappa coefficient of 0.645 (95% CI: 0.541-0.748, P<0.05). Conclusion The statistical advantage of Zhang's criteria/Chinese criteria is slightly greater than that of Williams criteria and Chinese diagnostic criteria for AD in children, which is in high agreement with the gold standard.
first_indexed 2024-03-08T18:59:48Z
format Article
id doaj.art-5a38f0ec9ee64467932c08c5c3979ea6
institution Directory Open Access Journal
issn 1674-8468
language zho
last_indexed 2024-03-08T18:59:48Z
publishDate 2023-04-01
publisher editoiral office of Journal of Diagnosis and Therapy on Dermato-venereology
record_format Article
series Pifu-xingbing zhenliaoxue zazhi
spelling doaj.art-5a38f0ec9ee64467932c08c5c3979ea62023-12-28T06:52:55Zzhoeditoiral office of Journal of Diagnosis and Therapy on Dermato-venereologyPifu-xingbing zhenliaoxue zazhi1674-84682023-04-0130212012410.3969/j.issn.1674-8468.2023.02.005A comparative study of three diagnostic criteria for atopic dermatitisWeijia ZHAOYuzhen LIObjective To compare the specificity, sensitivity, variability and consistency among three different diagnostic criteria for atopic dermatitis (AD) in subjects with and without AD. Methods We retrospectively analyzed patients with AD initially diagnosed according to the Hanifin Rajka criteria at our clinic between September 2020 and October 2021. Demographic characteristics, clinical manifestations and the results of laboratory tests were used to analyze the sensitivity and specificity of Williams criteria, Zhang's criteria/Chinese criteria and Chinese diagnostic criteria for childhood AD. Patients with other dermatological diseases visiting our clinic during the same period were used as controls. The sensitivity and specificity of the three diagnostic criteria were compared using McNemar's test, while Kappa values were used to determine the consistency of the diagnostic criteria. Results One hundred and ten patients with AD and 91 patients without AD were included in this analysis. The highest sensitivity and lowest specificity were Chinese diagnostic criteria for childhood AD (83.6%, 59.3%). Both Zhang's criteria/Chinese criteria and Williams criterion displayed the highest specificity (90.1% for both). Both positive and negative predictive values (90.2%, 75.2%) were higher for Zhang's criteria/Chinese criteria than the others. The Williams criteria exhibited the highest false negative rate (29.1%), while the highest false positive rate was found for the Chinese diagnostic criteria for AD in children (40.7%). The Zhang's criteria/Chinese criteria displayed the highest Youden index and Kappa coefficient, with a Kappa coefficient of 0.645 (95% CI: 0.541-0.748, P<0.05). Conclusion The statistical advantage of Zhang's criteria/Chinese criteria is slightly greater than that of Williams criteria and Chinese diagnostic criteria for AD in children, which is in high agreement with the gold standard.http://pfxbzlx.gdvdc.com/EN/10.3969/j.issn.1674-8468.2023.02.005atopic dermatitisdiagnostic criteriasensitivityspecificity
spellingShingle Weijia ZHAO
Yuzhen LI
A comparative study of three diagnostic criteria for atopic dermatitis
Pifu-xingbing zhenliaoxue zazhi
atopic dermatitis
diagnostic criteria
sensitivity
specificity
title A comparative study of three diagnostic criteria for atopic dermatitis
title_full A comparative study of three diagnostic criteria for atopic dermatitis
title_fullStr A comparative study of three diagnostic criteria for atopic dermatitis
title_full_unstemmed A comparative study of three diagnostic criteria for atopic dermatitis
title_short A comparative study of three diagnostic criteria for atopic dermatitis
title_sort comparative study of three diagnostic criteria for atopic dermatitis
topic atopic dermatitis
diagnostic criteria
sensitivity
specificity
url http://pfxbzlx.gdvdc.com/EN/10.3969/j.issn.1674-8468.2023.02.005
work_keys_str_mv AT weijiazhao acomparativestudyofthreediagnosticcriteriaforatopicdermatitis
AT yuzhenli acomparativestudyofthreediagnosticcriteriaforatopicdermatitis
AT weijiazhao comparativestudyofthreediagnosticcriteriaforatopicdermatitis
AT yuzhenli comparativestudyofthreediagnosticcriteriaforatopicdermatitis