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      STARD 2015 Update

      Radiology
      Radiological Society of North America (RSNA)

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          Towards complete and accurate reporting of studies of diagnostic accuracy: The STARD Initiative.

          To improve the accuracy and completeness of reporting of studies of diagnostic accuracy, to allow readers to assess the potential for bias in the study and to evaluate its generalisability. The Standards for Reporting of Diagnostic Accuracy (STARD) steering group searched the literature to identify publications on the appropriate conduct and reporting of diagnostic studies and extracted potential items into an extensive list. Researchers, editors, and members of professional organisations shortened this list during a two-day consensus meeting with the goal of developing a checklist and a generic flow diagram for studies of diagnostic accuracy. The search for published guidelines regarding diagnostic research yielded 33 previously published checklists, from which we extracted a list of 75 potential items. At the consensus meeting, participants shortened the list to a 25-item checklist, using evidence, whenever available. A prototypical flow diagram provides information about the method of patient recruitment, the order of test execution and the numbers of patients undergoing the test under evaluation, the reference standard or both. Evaluation of research depends on complete and accurate reporting. If medical journals adopt the checklist and the flow diagram, the quality of reporting of studies of diagnostic accuracy should improve to the advantage of the clinicians, researchers, reviewers, journals, and the public. Copyright RSNA, 2003
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            Reporting diagnostic accuracy studies: some improvements after 10 years of STARD.

            To evaluate how diagnostic accuracy study reports published in 2012 adhered to the Standards for Reporting of Diagnostic Accuracy (STARD) statement and whether there were any differences in reporting compared with 2000 and 2004.
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              Author and article information

              Journal
              Radiology
              Radiology
              Radiological Society of North America (RSNA)
              0033-8419
              1527-1315
              December 2015
              December 2015
              : 277
              : 3
              : 617
              Article
              10.1148/radiol.2015152138
              4792f609-6593-4aa7-988a-216550db0f2d
              © 2015
              History

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