Sam Weisenthal (@samweisenthal) 's Twitter Profile
Sam Weisenthal

@samweisenthal

@samweisenthal.bsky.social

stats ∩ medicine

ID: 868437693881081860

linkhttps://samweisenthal.com calendar_today27-05-2017 12:04:15

459 Tweet

198 Followers

1,1K Following

Sam Weisenthal (@samweisenthal) 's Twitter Profile Photo

board exam study tip: keep a mini-differential and update with new info, like a filter. less memory required, and fun! wordpress.com/post/samweisen…

Amit Chowdhry, MD, PhD (@amit_chowdhry) 's Twitter Profile Photo

Here’s our new preprint led by graduating URMC MSTP candidate Sam Weisenthal. There has been previously published work which shows that sensitivity and specificity are not independent of covariates. doi.org/10.48550/arXiv…

Sam Weisenthal (@samweisenthal) 's Twitter Profile Photo

Medicine is swimming in pre-test probability scores (eg Wells’). These scores + constant sens/spec assumption (see Dawid 1976, Moons and Harrell 2003, Guggenmoos 2000) = Information Mismatch See preprint for details: arxiv.org/pdf/2503.15382

Adam Rodman (@adamrodmanmd) 's Twitter Profile Photo

Fantastic piece on many of the limitations of test characteristics for determining post-test probability (which are well-known, and I rant about frequently with my poor residents)

Morgan Cheatham (@morgancheatham) 's Twitter Profile Photo

diagnostic tests are characterized by sensitivity and specificity, patients by covariates. when we condition one and not the other, we violate the assumptions of Bayes’ rule. this “information mismatch” is a strong mathematical argument for precision medicine 👇

Sam Weisenthal (@samweisenthal) 's Twitter Profile Photo

Any medical decision involves risks and benefits. Research studies (trials, risk score development, meta-analysis, etc) help us characterize these risks and benefits.

Sam Weisenthal (@samweisenthal) 's Twitter Profile Photo

When deciding whether to take a med, we think about benefit but also side effects. We need more risk models that predict whether someone will experience a side effect when taking a med.

Sam Weisenthal (@samweisenthal) 's Twitter Profile Photo

If a trial is powered for a primary outcome such as blood pressure, take care when drawing conclusions about noisier secondary outcomes, such as time-to-dialysis. samweisenthal.com/2025/04/17/sec…