Developing and Validating a Prediction Model For Death or Critical Illness in Hospitalized Adults, an Opportunity for Human-Computer Collaboration

Author:

Verma Amol A.123,Pou-Prom Chloe1,McCoy Liam G.2,Murray Joshua1,Nestor Bret45,Bell Shirley1,Mourad Ophyr12,Fralick Michael26,Friedrich Jan12,Ghassemi Marzyeh57,Mamdani Muhammad12358

Affiliation:

1. St. Michael’s Hospital, Unity Health Toronto, Toronto, ON, Canada.

2. Department of Medicine, University of Toronto, Toronto, ON, Canada.

3. Institute of Health Policy, Management and Evaluation, University of Toronto, Toronto, ON, Canada.

4. Department of Computer Science, University of Toronto, Toronto, ON, Canada.

5. Vector Institute, Toronto, ON, Canada.

6. Sinai Health System, Toronto, ON, Canada.

7. Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Cambridge, MA.

8. Leslie Dan Faculty of Pharmacy, University of Toronto, Toronto, ON, Canada.

Abstract

OBJECTIVES: Hospital early warning systems that use machine learning (ML) to predict clinical deterioration are increasingly being used to aid clinical decision-making. However, it is not known how ML predictions complement physician and nurse judgment. Our objective was to train and validate a ML model to predict patient deterioration and compare model predictions with real-world physician and nurse predictions. DESIGN: Retrospective and prospective cohort study. SETTING: Academic tertiary care hospital. PATIENTS: Adult general internal medicine hospitalizations. MEASUREMENTS AND MAIN RESULTS: We developed and validated a neural network model to predict in-hospital death and ICU admission in 23,528 hospitalizations between April 2011 and April 2019. We then compared model predictions with 3,374 prospectively collected predictions from nurses, residents, and attending physicians about their own patients in 960 hospitalizations between April 30, and August 28, 2019. ML model predictions achieved clinician-level accuracy for predicting ICU admission or death (ML median F1 score 0.32 [interquartile range (IQR) 0.30-0.34], AUC 0.77 [IQ 0.76-0.78]; clinicians median F1-score 0.33 [IQR 0.30–0.35], AUC 0.64 [IQR 0.63–0.66]). ML predictions were more accurate than clinicians for ICU admission. Of all ICU admissions and deaths, 36% occurred in hospitalizations where the model and clinicians disagreed. Combining human and model predictions detected 49% of clinical deterioration events, improving sensitivity by 16% compared with clinicians alone and 24% compared with the model alone while maintaining a positive predictive value of 33%, thus keeping false alarms at a clinically acceptable level. CONCLUSIONS: ML models can complement clinician judgment to predict clinical deterioration in hospital. These findings demonstrate important opportunities for human-computer collaboration to improve prognostication and personalized medicine in hospital.

Publisher

Ovid Technologies (Wolters Kluwer Health)

Subject

Critical Care and Intensive Care Medicine

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