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Deriving reference limits from historical data - A comparison of four novel methods.

Tomasz Szymon Szczepanski1, Petter Moe Omland2, Øystein Dunker3

  • 1Section for Clinical Neurophysiology, Department of Neurology, Oslo University Hospital, Oslo, Norway; Faculty of Medicine, University of Oslo, Oslo, Norway.

Clinical Neurophysiology : Official Journal of the International Federation of Clinical Neurophysiology
|November 29, 2025
PubMed
Summary
This summary is machine-generated.

Four novel methods for nerve conduction study (NCS) reference limits were compared. Extrapolated norms (E-norms) showed higher sensitivity, while other methods offered better specificity, suggesting a dynamic approach for optimal accuracy.

Keywords:
Clinical neurophysiologyExtrapolated normsMixture model clusteringMultivariable extrapolated reference valuesNerve conduction studiesReference limits

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Area of Science:

  • Neurology
  • Biostatistics

Background:

  • Establishing accurate reference limits for nerve conduction studies (NCS) is crucial for diagnosing neurological disorders.
  • Traditional methods often rely on data from healthy subjects, which may not fully represent diverse patient populations.

Purpose of the Study:

  • To evaluate four novel methods—extrapolated norms (E-norms), extrapolated reference values (E-Ref), multivariable extrapolated reference values (MeRef), and mixture model clustering (MMC)—for deriving NCS reference limits from historical data.
  • To compare the performance of these novel methods against established reference limits derived from healthy individuals.

Main Methods:

  • Reference limits for 29 NCS measurements were calculated using E-norms, E-Ref, MeRef, and MMC from a large historical database (24,618 patients).
  • The derived reference limits were validated against NCS reference limits from 680 healthy subjects using Youden's J statistics.

Main Results:

  • E-norms yielded reference limits with the highest Youden's J statistics, demonstrating superior sensitivity but lower specificity for most NCS measurements.
  • E-Ref, MeRef, and MMC generated reference limits with high specificity but lower sensitivity compared to E-norms.

Conclusions:

  • Significant performance variations exist among E-norms, E-Ref, MeRef, and MMC for establishing NCS reference limits.
  • A dynamic, adaptive strategy, adjusting the method based on NCS type and data availability, may optimize accuracy.
  • Combining these novel methods enables the creation of clinically valuable reference limits from historical patient data.