Zariski's main theorem: Difference between revisions

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A '''multiple of the median''' ('''MoM''') is a measure of how far an individual test result deviates from the [[median]].  MoM is commonly used to report the results of [[Screening (medicine)|medical screening]] tests, particularly where the results of the individual tests are highly [[Statistical dispersion|variable]].<ref>Bishop, J.C.; Dunstan, F.D.; Nix, B.J.; Reynolds, T.M. and Swift, A.; [http://www.pubmedcentral.nih.gov/articlerender.fcgi?artid=1682205 "All MoMs are not equal: some statistical properties associated with reporting results in the form of multiples of the median."] ''Am J Hum Genet.'' 1993 February; 52(2): 425–430.</ref>
 
MoM was originally used as a method to normalize data from participating laboratories of Alpha-fetoprotein (AFP) so that individual test results could be compared. 35 years later, it is the established standard for reporting maternal serum screening results.<ref>Berberich, Stanton L. "Using Multiples of the Median (MoM) for Normalization of TREC Results Meets the Need for Standardized SCID Reporting." http://www.aphl.org/conferences/proceedings/Documents/2013/2013-Newborn-Screening-Symposium/23Berberich.pdf</ref>
 
An MoM for a test result for a patient can be determined by the following:
:<math>MoM(Patient) = \frac{Result(Patient)}{Median(PatientPopulation)}</math>
 
As an example, [[Alpha-fetoprotein]] (AFP) testing is used to screen for a [[neural tube defect]] (NTD) during the second trimester of pregnancy. If the median AFP result at 16 weeks of gestation is 30 ng/mL and a pregnant woman's AFP result at that same gestational age is 60 ng/mL, then her MoM is equal to 60/30 = 2.0. In other words, her AFP result is 2 times higher than "normal." <ref>Grenache, David. "Multiple of the Median." http://www.pregnancylab.net/multiple-of-the-median/</ref>
 
==References==
{{reflist}}
 
==External links==
* {{cite web |last= Parvin |first= CA |coauthors= DL Gray and G Kessler |title= Influence of assay method differences on multiple of the median distributions: maternal serum alpha-fetoprotein as an example |work= Clinical Chemistry Vol 37, 637-642 |publisher= American Association for Clinical Chemistry |date= 1991 |url= http://www.clinchem.org/cgi/content/abstract/37/5/637 |accessdate= 2008-02-16}}
 
{{medicine-stub}}
 
[[Category:Medical tests]]
[[Category:Medical terminology]]
[[Category:Summary statistics]]
[[Category:Medical statistics]]

Revision as of 04:35, 3 August 2013

A multiple of the median (MoM) is a measure of how far an individual test result deviates from the median. MoM is commonly used to report the results of medical screening tests, particularly where the results of the individual tests are highly variable.[1]

MoM was originally used as a method to normalize data from participating laboratories of Alpha-fetoprotein (AFP) so that individual test results could be compared. 35 years later, it is the established standard for reporting maternal serum screening results.[2]

An MoM for a test result for a patient can be determined by the following:

As an example, Alpha-fetoprotein (AFP) testing is used to screen for a neural tube defect (NTD) during the second trimester of pregnancy. If the median AFP result at 16 weeks of gestation is 30 ng/mL and a pregnant woman's AFP result at that same gestational age is 60 ng/mL, then her MoM is equal to 60/30 = 2.0. In other words, her AFP result is 2 times higher than "normal." [3]

References

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External links

Template:Medicine-stub

  1. Bishop, J.C.; Dunstan, F.D.; Nix, B.J.; Reynolds, T.M. and Swift, A.; "All MoMs are not equal: some statistical properties associated with reporting results in the form of multiples of the median." Am J Hum Genet. 1993 February; 52(2): 425–430.
  2. Berberich, Stanton L. "Using Multiples of the Median (MoM) for Normalization of TREC Results Meets the Need for Standardized SCID Reporting." http://www.aphl.org/conferences/proceedings/Documents/2013/2013-Newborn-Screening-Symposium/23Berberich.pdf
  3. Grenache, David. "Multiple of the Median." http://www.pregnancylab.net/multiple-of-the-median/