Science Forum: Is preclinical research in cancer biology reproducible enough?

  1. Patrick Bodilly Kane
  2. Jonathan Kimmelman  Is a corresponding author
  1. Studies in Translation, Ethics and Medicine, Biomedical Ethics Unit, McGill University, Canada
1 figure

Figures

The positive likelihood ratio as a function of the Positive Predictive Value (PPV) and the base rate.

The positive likelihood ratio (y-axis) increases with the PPV (x-axis) for a given value of the base rate (see color code). However, for a given value of the PPV, the positive likelihood ratio decreases as the base rate increases. The vertical dashed lines represent the two estimates of the PPV (16% and 47%) we derived for the RPCB. Typically, a positive likelihood ratio between 1 and 2 is considered weak evidence, while ratios between 2 and 10 constitute moderate evidence, and ratios higher than 10 constitute strong evidence. A ratio of less than one indicates that a test is actively uninformative.

Download links

A two-part list of links to download the article, or parts of the article, in various formats.

Downloads (link to download the article as PDF)

Open citations (links to open the citations from this article in various online reference manager services)

Cite this article (links to download the citations from this article in formats compatible with various reference manager tools)

  1. Patrick Bodilly Kane
  2. Jonathan Kimmelman
(2021)
Science Forum: Is preclinical research in cancer biology reproducible enough?
eLife 10:e67527.
https://doi.org/10.7554/eLife.67527