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. 2021 Apr 15;2021(4):CD013346. doi: 10.1002/14651858.CD013346.pub2

Ye 2019a.

Study characteristics
Patient Sampling This study enrolled a total of 1244 participants, including HCC, healthy controls , benign liver tumours , chronic hepatitis B, and liver cirrhosis
Age range and % males not reported
Patient characteristics and setting  
Index tests Serum AFP measurement with no predefined cut‐off value
Target condition and reference standard(s) Diagnosis of LC was based on a history of CHB infection, confirmed by biopsy or two imaging technologies, i.e. hepatic ultrasound with CT or MRI. To limit the possible presence of early‐stage HCC clinically unrecognised in cirrhosis Patients with cirrhosis with < 20 years of chronic hepatitis history and in compensated phase of the disease were preferred.
HCC was diagnosed based on ultrasound, CT, or MRI and AFP serology and confirmed by histopathology according to guidelines of the American Association for the Study of Liver Disease (AASLD).
Flow and timing No information on interval between index test and reference standard
Comparative  
Notes No information on conflicts of interest
Methodological quality
Item Authors' judgement Risk of bias Applicability concerns
DOMAIN 1: Patient Selection
Was a consecutive or random sample of patients enrolled? No    
Was a case‐control design avoided? No    
Did the study avoid inappropriate exclusions? Unclear    
Could the selection of patients have introduced bias?   High risk  
Are there concerns that the included patients and setting do not match the review question?     High
DOMAIN 2: Index Test (AFP)
Were the index test results interpreted without knowledge of the results of the reference standard? Yes    
If a threshold was used, was it pre‐specified? No    
Could the conduct or interpretation of the index test have introduced bias?   High risk  
Are there concerns that the index test, its conduct, or interpretation differ from the review question?     Low concern
DOMAIN 2: Index Test (US+AFP)
Were the index test results interpreted without knowledge of the results of the reference standard?      
If a threshold was used, was it pre‐specified?      
Could the conduct or interpretation of the index test have introduced bias?      
Are there concerns that the index test, its conduct, or interpretation differ from the review question?      
DOMAIN 2: Index Test (US)
Were the index test results interpreted without knowledge of the results of the reference standard?      
If a threshold was used, was it pre‐specified?      
Could the conduct or interpretation of the index test have introduced bias?      
Are there concerns that the index test, its conduct, or interpretation differ from the review question?      
DOMAIN 3: Reference Standard
Is the reference standards likely to correctly classify the target condition? Yes    
Were the reference standard results interpreted without knowledge of the results of the index tests? No    
Could the reference standard, its conduct, or its interpretation have introduced bias?   High risk  
Are there concerns that the target condition as defined by the reference standard does not match the question?     Low concern
DOMAIN 4: Flow and Timing
Was there an appropriate interval between index test and reference standard? Unclear    
Did all patients receive the same reference standard? No    
Were all patients included in the analysis? Yes    
Could the patient flow have introduced bias?   High risk