A Logistic Regression Model for Predicting the Risk of Subsequent Surgery among Patients with Newly Diagnosed Crohn’s Disease Using a Brute Force Method

Author:

Ogasawara Kohei1,Hiraga Hiroto1ORCID,Sasaki Yoshihiro2,Hiraga Noriko1,Higuchi Naoki1,Hasui Keisuke1,Ota Shinji1,Maeda Takato1,Murai Yasuhisa1ORCID,Tatsuta Tetsuya1,Kikuchi Hidezumi1,Chinda Daisuke1ORCID,Mikami Tatsuya1ORCID,Matsuzaka Masashi2,Sakuraba Hirotake1,Fukuda Shinsaku1

Affiliation:

1. Department of Gastroenterology and Hematology, Hirosaki University Graduate School of Medicine, Hirosaki 036-8562, Japan

2. Department of Medical Informatics, Hirosaki University Hospital, Hirosaki 036-8563, Japan

Abstract

Surgery avoidance is an important goal in Crohn’s disease (CD) treatment and predicting the risk of subsequent surgery is important to determine adequate therapeutic strength for patients with newly diagnosed CD. Herein, we aimed to construct a prediction model for the risk of subsequent surgery based on disease characteristics at the patients’ initial visit. We retrospectively collected disease characteristic data from 93 patients with newly diagnosed CD. A logistic regression model with a brute force method was used to maximize the area under the receiver operating characteristic curve (auROC) by employing a combination of potential predictors from 14 covariates (16,383). The auROC remained almost constant when one to 12 covariates were considered, reaching a peak of 0.89 at four covariates (small-bowel patency, extensive small-bowel lesions, main lesions, and the number of poor prognostic factors), and it decreased with increasing covariate size. The most significant predictors were small-bowel patency, extensive small-bowel lesions, and age or major lesions. Therefore, this prediction model using covariates may be helpful in determining the likelihood that a patient with newly diagnosed CD will require surgery, which can aid in appropriate treatment selection for high-risk patients.

Publisher

MDPI AG

Subject

Clinical Biochemistry

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