Estimation of required sample size for external validation of risk models for binary outcomes

Author:

Pavlou Menelaos1ORCID,Qu Chen1,Omar Rumana Z1,Seaman Shaun R2ORCID,Steyerberg Ewout W3,White Ian R4,Ambler Gareth1

Affiliation:

1. Department of Statistical Science, University College London, UK

2. MRC Biostatistics Unit, Institute of Public Health, University of Cambridge, Cambridge, UK

3. Department of Biomedical Data Sciences, Leiden University Medical Center, Leiden, Netherlands

4. MRC Clinical Trials Unit, University College London, London, UK

Abstract

Risk-prediction models for health outcomes are used in practice as part of clinical decision-making, and it is essential that their performance be externally validated. An important aspect in the design of a validation study is choosing an adequate sample size. In this paper, we investigate the sample size requirements for validation studies with binary outcomes to estimate measures of predictive performance (C-statistic for discrimination and calibration slope and calibration in the large). We aim for sufficient precision in the estimated measures. In addition, we investigate the sample size to achieve sufficient power to detect a difference from a target value. Under normality assumptions on the distribution of the linear predictor, we obtain simple estimators for sample size calculations based on the measures above. Simulation studies show that the estimators perform well for common values of the C-statistic and outcome prevalence when the linear predictor is marginally Normal. Their performance deteriorates only slightly when the normality assumptions are violated. We also propose estimators which do not require normality assumptions but require specification of the marginal distribution of the linear predictor and require the use of numerical integration. These estimators were also seen to perform very well under marginal normality. Our sample size equations require a specified standard error (SE) and the anticipated C-statistic and outcome prevalence. The sample size requirement varies according to the prognostic strength of the model, outcome prevalence, choice of the performance measure and study objective. For example, to achieve an SE < 0.025 for the C-statistic, 60–170 events are required if the true C-statistic and outcome prevalence are between 0.64–0.85 and 0.05–0.3, respectively. For the calibration slope and calibration in the large, achieving SE < 0.15[Formula: see text]would require 40–280 and 50–100 events, respectively. Our estimators may also be used for survival outcomes when the proportion of censored observations is high.

Funder

Medical Research Council

Publisher

SAGE Publications

Subject

Health Information Management,Statistics and Probability,Epidemiology

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