Endoscopy 2016; 48(10): 899-908
DOI: 10.1055/s-0042-108727
Original article
© Georg Thieme Verlag KG Stuttgart · New York

Terminal digit preference biases polyp size measurements at endoscopy, computed tomographic colonography, and histopathology

Andrew A. Plumb
1   Centre for Medical Imaging, Division of Medicine, University College London, London, United Kingdom
,
Claire Nickerson
2   NHS Cancer Screening Programmes, Fulwood House, Sheffield, United Kingdom
,
Katherine Wooldrage
3   Cancer Screening and Prevention Research Group, Department of Surgery and Cancer, Imperial College London, London, United Kingdom
,
Paul Bassett
4   Research Support Centre, University College London, London, United Kingdom
,
Stuart A. Taylor
1   Centre for Medical Imaging, Division of Medicine, University College London, London, United Kingdom
,
Douglas Altman
5   Centre for Statistics in Medicine, University of Oxford, Oxford, United Kingdom
,
Wendy Atkin
3   Cancer Screening and Prevention Research Group, Department of Surgery and Cancer, Imperial College London, London, United Kingdom
,
Steve Halligan
1   Centre for Medical Imaging, Division of Medicine, University College London, London, United Kingdom
› Author Affiliations
Further Information

Publication History

submitted08 December 2015

accepted after revision26 April 2016

Publication Date:
21 July 2016 (online)

Background and study aims: Terminal digit preference bias for “pleasing” numbers has been described in many areas of medicine. The aim of this study was to determine whether endoscopists, radiologists, and pathologists exhibit such bias when measuring colorectal polyp diameters.

Methods: Colorectal polyp diameters measured at endoscopy, computed tomographic colonography (CTC), and histopathology were collated from a colorectal cancer screening program and two parallel multicenter randomized trials. Smoothing models were fitted to the data to estimate the expected number of polyps at 1-mm increments, assuming no systematic measurement bias. The difference between the expected and observed numbers of polyps was calculated for each terminal digit using statistical modeling. The impact of measurement bias on per-patient detection rates of polyps ≥ 10 mm was estimated for each modality.

Results: A total of 92 124 individual polyps were measured by endoscopy (91 670 screening and 454 from trials), 2385 polyps were measured by CTC (1664 screening, 721 trials), and 79 272 were measured by histopathology (78 783 screening, 489 trials). Clustering of polyp diameter measurements at 5-mm intervals was demonstrated for all modalities, both in the screening program and the trials. The statistical models estimated that per-patient detection rates of polyps ≥ 10 mm were over-inflated by 2.4 % for endoscopy, 3.1 % for CTC, and 3.3 % for histopathology in the screening program, with similar trends in the randomized trials.

Conclusion: Endoscopists, radiologists, and pathologists all exhibit terminal digit preference when measuring colorectal polyps. This will bias trial data, referral rates for further testing, adenoma surveillance regimens, and comparisons between tests.

 
  • References

  • 1 Brenner H, Stock C, Hoffmeister M. Effect of screening sigmoidoscopy and screening colonoscopy on colorectal cancer incidence and mortality: systematic review and meta-analysis of randomised controlled trials and observational studies. BMJ 2014; 348: g2467
  • 2 Atkin WS, Edwards R, Kralj-Hans I et al. Once-only flexible sigmoidoscopy screening in prevention of colorectal cancer: a multicentre randomised controlled trial. Lancet 2010; 375: 1624-1633
  • 3 Segnan N, Armaroli P, Bonelli L et al. Once-only sigmoidoscopy in colorectal cancer screening: follow-up findings of the Italian Randomized Controlled Trial--SCORE. J Natl Cancer Inst 2011; 103: 1310-1322
  • 4 Hoff G, Grotmol T, Skovlund E et al. Risk of colorectal cancer seven years after flexible sigmoidoscopy screening: randomised controlled trial. BMJ 2009; 338: b1846
  • 5 Schoen RE, Pinsky PF, Weissfeld JL et al. Colorectal-cancer incidence and mortality with screening flexible sigmoidoscopy. N Engl J Med 2012; 366: 2345-2357
  • 6 Cairns SR, Scholefield JH, Steele RJ et al. Guidelines for colorectal cancer screening and surveillance in moderate and high risk groups (update from 2002). Gut 2010; 59: 666-689
  • 7 Hassan C, Quintero E, Dumonceau JM et al. Post-polypectomy colonoscopy surveillance: European Society of Gastrointestinal Endoscopy (ESGE) Guideline. Endoscopy 2013; 45: 842-851
  • 8 de Haan MC, van Gelder RE, Graser A et al. Diagnostic value of CT-colonography as compared to colonoscopy in an asymptomatic screening population: a meta-analysis. Eur Radiol 2011; 21: 1747-1763
  • 9 Pickhardt PJ, Hassan C, Halligan S et al. Colorectal cancer: CT colonography and colonoscopy for detection – systematic review and meta-analysis. Radiology 2011; 259: 393-405
  • 10 Kolligs FT, Crispin A, Graser A et al. Risk factors for advanced neoplasia within subcentimetric polyps: implications for diagnostic imaging. Gut 2013; 62: 863-870
  • 11 Zalis ME, Barish MA, Choi JR et al. CT colonography reporting and data system: a consensus proposal. Radiology 2005; 236: 3-9
  • 12 Punwani S, Halligan S, Irving P et al. Measurement of colonic polyps by radiologists and endoscopists: who is most accurate?. Eur Radiol 2008; 18: 874-881
  • 13 de Vries AH, Bipat S, Dekker E et al. Polyp measurement based on CT colonography and colonoscopy: variability and systematic differences. Eur Radiol 2010; 20: 1404-1413
  • 14 Quirke P, Risio M, Lambert R et al. European guidelines for quality assurance in colorectal cancer screening and diagnosis. First Edition – Quality assurance in pathology in colorectal cancer screening and diagnosis. Endoscopy 2012; 44 (Suppl. 03) SE116-130
  • 15 Winawer SJ, Zauber AG. The advanced adenoma as the primary target of screening. Gastrointest Endosc Clin N Am 2002; 12: 1-9
  • 16 Stoop EM, de Haan MC, de Wijkerslooth TR et al. Participation and yield of colonoscopy versus non-cathartic CT colonography in population-based screening for colorectal cancer: a randomised controlled trial. Lancet Oncol 2012; 13: 55-64
  • 17 Kim DH, Pickhardt PJ, Leung WK et al. CT colonography versus colonoscopy for the detection of advanced neoplasia. N Engl J Med 2007; 357: 1403-1412
  • 18 Nietert PJ, Wessell AM, Feifer C et al. Effect of terminal digit preference on blood pressure measurement and treatment in primary care. Am J Hypertens 2006; 19: 147-152
  • 19 Hayes SJ. Terminal digit preference occurs in pathology reporting irrespective of patient management implication. J Clin Pathol 2008; 61: 1071-1072
  • 20 Locker TE, Mason SM. Digit preference bias in the recording of emergency department times. Eur J Emerg Med 2006; 13: 99-101
  • 21 Atkin W, Dadswell E, Wooldrage K et al. Computed tomographic colonography versus colonoscopy for investigation of patients with symptoms suggestive of colorectal cancer (SIGGAR): a multicentre randomised trial. Lancet 2013; 381: 1194-1202
  • 22 Halligan S, Wooldrage K, Dadswell E et al. Computed tomographic colonography versus barium enema for diagnosis of colorectal cancer or large polyps in symptomatic patients (SIGGAR): a multicentre randomised trial. Lancet 2013; 381: 1185-1193
  • 23 Logan RFA, Patnick J, Nickerson C et al. Outcomes of the Bowel Cancer Screening Programme (BCSP) in England after the first 1 million tests. Gut 2012; 61: 1439-1446
  • 24 Spada C, Stoker J, Alarcon O et al. Clinical indications for computed tomographic colonography: European Society of Gastrointestinal Endoscopy (ESGE) and European Society of Gastrointestinal and Abdominal Radiology (ESGAR) Guideline. Endoscopy 2014; 46: 897-915
  • 25 Spada C, Stoker J, Alarcon O et al. Clinical indications for computed tomographic colonography: European Society of Gastrointestinal Endoscopy (ESGE) and European Society of Gastrointestinal and Abdominal Radiology (ESGAR) Guideline. Eur Radiol 2015; 25: 331-345
  • 26 Joint Advisory Group on GI Endoscopy. Accreditation of screening colonoscopists. BCSP Guidelines. Royal College of Physicians. 2013 Available from: http://www.saas.nhs.uk/documents/Accreditation%20of%20screening%20colonoscopists%20guidelines%20final_June_2013.pdf
  • 27 Burling D, Patnick J. Guidelines for the use of imaging in the NHS Bowel Cancer Screening Programme. Sheffield: NHS Cancer Screening Programmes 2010
  • 28 Ren S, Lai H, Tong W et al. Nonparametric bootstrapping for hierarchical data. J Applied Stat 2010; 37: 1487-1498
  • 29 Camarda CG, Eilers PHC, Gampe J. Modelling general patterns of digit preference. Stat Modelling 2008; 8: 385-401
  • 30 Wang B, Wertelecki W. Density estimation for data with rounding errors. Comput Stat Data Anal 2013; 65: 4-12
  • 31 Wang B. bda: Density estimation for binned/weighted data. R package version 3.2.0-3. Available from: 2014 https://cran.r-project.org/web/packages/bda/index.html
  • 32 Myers RJ. Errors and bias in the reporting of ages in census data. Transactions of the Actuarial Society of America 1940; 41: 395-415
  • 33 Jowett AJ, Li Y. Age-heaping: contrasting patterns from China. GeoJournal 1992; 28: 427-442
  • 34 Emmerson AJ, Roberts SA. Rounding of birth weights in a neonatal intensive care unit over 20 years: an analysis of a large cohort study. BMJ Open 2013; 3: e003650
  • 35 Hayes SJ. Does terminal digit preference occur in pathology?. J Clin Pathol 2008; 61: 975-976
  • 36 Summers RM. Polyp size measurement at CT colonography: what do we know and what do we need to know?. Radiology 2010; 255: 707-720
  • 37 Gopalswamy N, Shenoy VN, Choudhry U et al. Is in vivo measurement of size of polyps during colonoscopy accurate?. Gastrointest Endosc 1997; 46: 497-502
  • 38 Rubio CA, Grimelius L, Lindholm J et al. Reliability of the reported size of removed colorectal polyps. Anticancer Res 2006; 26: 4895-4899
  • 39 Feinstein AR, Sosin DM, Wells CK. The Will Rogers phenomenon. Stage migration and new diagnostic techniques as a source of misleading statistics for survival in cancer. N Engl J Med 1985; 312: 1604-1608