Identification of Electrocardiographic Patterns Related to Mortality with COVID-19

Author:

Sbrollini Agnese1ORCID,Leoni Chiara1,Morettini Micaela1ORCID,Rivolta Massimo W.2ORCID,Swenne Cees A.3ORCID,Mainardi Luca4ORCID,Burattini Laura1ORCID,Sassi Roberto2ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Information Engineering, Università Politecnica delle Marche, 60121 Ancona, Italy

2. Dipartimento di Informatica, Università degli Studi di Milano, 20133 Milan, Italy

3. Cardiology Department, Leiden University Medical Center, 2333 ZA Leiden, The Netherlands

4. Department of Electronics, Information and Bioengineering, Politecnico di Milano, 20156 Milano, Italy

Abstract

COVID-19 is an infectious disease that has greatly affected worldwide healthcare systems, due to the high number of cases and deaths. As COVID-19 patients may develop cardiac comorbidities that can be potentially fatal, electrocardiographic monitoring can be crucial. This work aims to identify electrocardiographic and vectorcardiographic patterns that may be related to mortality in COVID-19, with the application of the Advanced Repeated Structuring and Learning Procedure (AdvRS&LP). The procedure was applied to data from the “automatic computation of cardiovascular arrhythmic risk from electrocardiographic data of COVID-19 patients” (COVIDSQUARED) project to obtain neural networks (NNs) that, through 254 electrocardiographic and vectorcardiographic features, could discriminate between COVID-19 survivors and deaths. The NNs were validated by a five-fold cross-validation procedure and assessed in terms of the area under the curve (AUC) of the receiver operating characteristic. The features’ contribution to the classification was evaluated through the Local-Interpretable Model-Agnostic Explanations (LIME) algorithm. The obtained NNs properly discriminated between COVID-19 survivors and deaths (AUC = 84.31 ± 2.58% on hold-out testing datasets); the classification was mainly affected by the electrocardiographic-interval-related features, thus suggesting that changes in the duration of cardiac electrical activity might be related to mortality in COVID-19 cases.

Publisher

MDPI AG

Subject

Fluid Flow and Transfer Processes,Computer Science Applications,Process Chemistry and Technology,General Engineering,Instrumentation,General Materials Science

Reference45 articles.

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