The Press and Journal (Inverness, Highlands, and Islands)

Health: Hopes methods will boost diagnostic tools

- BY KATRINE BUSSEY

Work by the Second World War codebreake­r Alan Turing could help develop better tests for the early detection of cancer and other diseases, according to university experts.

Researcher­s at Edinburgh University believe his mathematic­al techniques could be used to help measure the effectiven­ess of existing diagnostic tools.

Currently, the accuracy of diagnostic tests is assessed using statistica­l techniques developed in the 1980s, with these unable to gauge how useful a test could be in determinin­g an individual’s risk of developing a disease.

Butnowexpe­rtsatthe university’s Usher Institute of Population Health Sciences and Informatic­s believe Turing’s methods could improve these.

Working at Bletchley Park in 1941, Turing came up with the method used to break the German forces’ Enigma code.

H i s a p p r o a c h investigat­ed the distributi­on of so-called weights of evidence – which establish the likely outcomes in a given situation – to help him decide the best strategy for cracking Enigma.

Researcher­s think applying the same principle could potentiall­y aid the developmen­t of personalis­ed treatments, a study published in Statistica­l Methods in Medical research has revealed.

Turing worked out how the weight of evidence was expected to vary over repeated experiment­s, with these ideas developed further in 1968 and published by his former assistant Jack Good.

Professor Paul McKeigue, of the university’s Usher Institute of Population Health Sciences and Informatic­s, said the same principle of how the weight of evidence varies can be applied to evaluate the diagnostic tests used for personalis­ed treatments.

In this way, the performanc­e of a test can be quantified.

He stated: “The new era of precision medicine is emerging and this method should make it easier for researcher­s and regulatory agencies to decide when a new diagnostic test should be used.”

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