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Training machine learning models to predict 30-day mortality in patients discharged from the emergency department: a retrospective, population based registry study
Department of Clinical Sciences, Lund University, Lund, Sweden.
Halmstad University, School of Information Technology, Halmstad Embedded and Intelligent Systems Research (EIS), CAISR - Center for Applied Intelligent Systems Research. Halland Hospital, Region Halland, Halmstad, Sweden.ORCID iD: 0000-0001-5688-0156
Halmstad University, School of Information Technology, Halmstad Embedded and Intelligent Systems Research (EIS), CAISR - Center for Applied Intelligent Systems Research.ORCID iD: 0000-0002-3495-2961
Department of Emergency Medicine, Brigham and Women’s Hospital, Boston, Massachusetts, USA & Harvard Medical School, Boston, Massachusetts, USA.
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2019 (English)In: BMJ Open, E-ISSN 2044-6055, Vol. 9, no 8, article id e028015Article in journal (Refereed) Published
Abstract [en]

Background: Aggressive treatment at end-of-life (EOL) can be traumatic to patients and may not add clinical benefit. Absent an accurate prognosis of death, individual level biases may prevent timely discussions about the scope of EOL care and patients are at risk of being subject to care against their desire. The aim of this work is to develop predictive algorithms for identifying patients at EOL, with clinically meaningful discriminatory power.

Methods: Retrospective, population-based study of patients utilizing emergency departments (EDs) in Sweden, Europe. Electronic health records (EHRs) were used to train supervised learning algorithms to predict all-cause mortality within 30 days following ED discharge. Algorithm performance was validated out of sample on EHRs from a separate hospital, to which the algorithms were previously unexposed.

Results: Of 65,776 visits in the development set, 136 (0.21%) experienced the outcome. The algorithm with highest discrimination attained ROC-AUC 0.945 (95% CI 0.933 - 0.956), with sensitivity 0.869 (95% CI 0.802, 0.931) and specificity 0.858 (0.855, 0.860) on the validation set.

Conclusions: Multiple algorithms displayed excellent discrimination and outperformed available indexes for short-term mortality prediction. The practical utility of the algorithms increases as the required data were captured electronically and did not require de novo data collection.

Trial registration number: Not applicable.

Place, publisher, year, edition, pages
London: BMJ Publishing Group Ltd, 2019. Vol. 9, no 8, article id e028015
National Category
Social and Clinical Pharmacy
Identifiers
URN: urn:nbn:se:hh:diva-39307DOI: 10.1136/bmjopen-2018-028015ISI: 000502537200142PubMedID: 31401594Scopus ID: 2-s2.0-85070687111OAI: oai:DiVA.org:hh-39307DiVA, id: diva2:1313022
Note

Funding: This work was partly funded by Region Halland, Sweden.The initial stage of MCBs involvement in the work was funded by a grant for post-doctoral research from the Tegger Foundation.

Available from: 2019-05-02 Created: 2019-05-02 Last updated: 2023-08-28Bibliographically approved
In thesis
1. Predicting clinical outcomes via machine learning on electronic health records
Open this publication in new window or tab >>Predicting clinical outcomes via machine learning on electronic health records
2019 (English)Licentiate thesis, comprehensive summary (Other academic)
Abstract [en]

The rising complexity in healthcare, exacerbated by an ageing population, results in ineffective decision-making leading to detrimental effects on care quality and escalates care costs. Consequently, there is a need for smart decision support systems that can empower clinician's to make better informed care decisions. Decisions, which are not only based on general clinical knowledge and personal experience, but also rest on personalised and precise insights about future patient outcomes. A promising approach is to leverage the ongoing digitization of healthcare that generates unprecedented amounts of clinical data stored in Electronic Health Records (EHRs) and couple it with modern Machine Learning (ML) toolset for clinical decision support, and simultaneously, expand the evidence base of medicine. As promising as it sounds, assimilating complete clinical data that provides a rich perspective of the patient's health state comes with a multitude of data-science challenges that impede efficient learning of ML models. This thesis primarily focuses on learning comprehensive patient representations from EHRs. The key challenges of heterogeneity and temporality in EHR data are addressed using human-derived features appended to contextual embeddings of clinical concepts and Long-Short-Term-Memory networks, respectively. The developed models are empirically evaluated in the context of predicting adverse clinical outcomes such as mortality or hospital readmissions. We also present evidence that, surprisingly, different ML models primarily designed for non-EHR analysis (like language processing and time-series prediction) can be combined and adapted into a single framework to efficiently represent EHR data and predict patient outcomes.

Place, publisher, year, edition, pages
Halmstad: Halmstad University Press, 2019
Series
Halmstad University Dissertations ; 58
National Category
Health Care Service and Management, Health Policy and Services and Health Economy
Identifiers
urn:nbn:se:hh:diva-39309 (URN)978-91-88749-24-6 (ISBN)978-91-88749-25-3 (ISBN)
Presentation
2019-05-23, R4318, R Building, Halmstad University, Halmstad, Sweden, 13:00 (English)
Opponent
Supervisors
Available from: 2019-05-06 Created: 2019-05-02 Last updated: 2019-05-06Bibliographically approved
2. Deep Evidential Doctor
Open this publication in new window or tab >>Deep Evidential Doctor
2022 (English)Doctoral thesis, comprehensive summary (Other academic)
Abstract [en]

Recent years have witnessed an unparalleled surge in deep neural networks (DNNs) research, surpassing traditional machine learning (ML) and statistical methods on benchmark datasets in computer vision, audio processing and natural language processing (NLP). Much of this success can be attributed to the availability of numerous open-source datasets, advanced computational resources and algorithms. These algorithms learn multiple levels of simple to complex abstractions (or representations) of data resulting in superior performances on downstream applications. This has led to an increasing interest in reaping the potential of DNNs in real-life safety-critical domains such as autonomous driving, security systems and healthcare. Each of them comes with their own set of complexities and requirements, thereby necessitating the development of new approaches to address domain-specific problems, even if building on common foundations.

In this thesis, we address data science related challenges involved in learning effective prediction models from structured electronic health records (EHRs). In particular, questions related to numerical representation of complex and heterogeneous clinical concepts, modelling the sequential structure of EHRs and quantifying prediction uncertainties are studied. From a clinical perspective, the question of predicting onset of adverse outcomes for individual patients is considered to enable early interventions, improve patient outcomes, curb unnecessary expenditures and expand clinical knowledge.

This is a compilation thesis including five articles. It begins by describing a healthcare information platform that encapsulates clinical, operational and financial data of patients across all public care delivery units in Halland, Sweden. Thus, the platform overcomes the technical and legislative data-related challenges inherent to the modern era's complex and fragmented healthcare sector. The thesis presents evidence that expert clinical features are powerful predictors of adverse patient outcomes. However, they are well complemented by clinical concept embeddings; gleaned via NLP inspired language models. In particular, a novel representation learning framework (KAFE: Knowledge And Frequency adapted Embeddings) has been proposed that leverages medical knowledge schema and adversarial principles to learn high quality embeddings of both frequent and rare clinical concepts. In the context of sequential EHR modelling, benchmark experiments on cost-sensitive recurrent nets have shown significant improvements compared to non-sequential networks. In particular, an attention based hierarchical recurrent net is proposed that represents individual patients as weighted sums of ordered visits, where visits are, in turn, represented as weighted sums of unordered clinical concepts. In the context of uncertainty quantification and building trust in models, the field of deep evidential learning has been extended. In particular for multi-label tasks, simple extensions to current neural network architecture are proposed, coupled with a novel loss criterion to infer prediction uncertainties without compromising on accuracy. Moreover, a qualitative assessment of the model behaviour has also been an important part of the research articles, to analyse the correlations learned by the model in relation to established clinical science.

Put together, we develop DEep Evidential Doctor (DEED). DEED is a generic predictive model that learns efficient representations of patients and clinical concepts from EHRs and quantifies its confidence in individual predictions. It is also equipped to infer unseen labels.

Overall, this thesis presents a few small steps towards solving the bigger goal of artificial intelligence (AI) in healthcare. The research has consistently shown impressive prediction performance for multiple adverse outcomes. However, we believe that there are numerous emerging challenges to be addressed in order to reap the full benefits of data and AI in healthcare. For future works, we aim to extend the DEED framework to incorporate wider data modalities such as clinical notes, signals and daily lifestyle information. We will also work to equip DEED with explainability features.

Place, publisher, year, edition, pages
Halmstad: Halmstad University Press, 2022. p. 21
Series
Halmstad University Dissertations ; 88
National Category
Computer Sciences
Identifiers
urn:nbn:se:hh:diva-46347 (URN)978-91-88749-85-7 (ISBN)978-91-88749-86-4 (ISBN)
Public defence
2022-03-15, J102 (Wigforss), Visionen, Kristian IV:s väg 3, Halmstad, 13:00 (English)
Opponent
Supervisors
Available from: 2022-02-15 Created: 2022-02-15 Last updated: 2022-05-12Bibliographically approved

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Ashfaq, AwaisPinheiro Sant'Anna, Anita

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