MLLGApr 22, 2025

Behavior of prediction performance metrics with rare events

arXiv:2504.16185v21 citationsh-index: 6J Clin Epidemiology
Originality Incremental advance
AI Analysis

This addresses concerns about misleading performance metrics for clinicians and researchers using prediction models for rare clinical events like suicide attempts.

The study investigated whether the bias and variance of the Area Under the Curve (AUC) metric in prediction models are driven by the number of events or the event rate in rare-event settings, finding that poor AUC behavior is driven by the number of events, with near-zero bias observed with 1000 events.

Objective: Area under the receiving operator characteristic curve (AUC) is commonly reported alongside prediction models for binary outcomes. Recent articles have raised concerns that AUC might be a misleading measure of prediction performance in the rare event setting. This setting is common since many events of clinical importance are rare. We aimed to determine whether the bias and variance of AUC are driven by the number of events or the event rate. We also investigated the behavior of other commonly used measures of prediction performance, including positive predictive value, accuracy, sensitivity, and specificity. Study Design and Setting: We conducted a simulation study to determine when or whether AUC is unstable in the rare event setting by varying the size of datasets used to train and evaluate prediction models. This plasmode simulation study was based on data from the Mental Health Research Network; the data contained 149 predictors and the outcome of interest, suicide attempt, which had event rate 0.92\% in the original dataset. Results: Our results indicate that poor AUC behavior -- as measured by empirical bias, variability of cross-validated AUC estimates, and empirical coverage of confidence intervals -- is driven by the number of events in a rare-event setting, not event rate. Performance of sensitivity is driven by the number of events, while that of specificity is driven by the number of non-events. Other measures, including positive predictive value and accuracy, depend on the event rate even in large samples. Conclusion: AUC is reliable in the rare event setting provided that the total number of events is moderately large; in our simulations, we observed near zero bias with 1000 events.

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