International Classification of Diseases Prediction from MIMIIC-III Clinical Text Using Pre-Trained ClinicalBERT and NLP Deep Learning Models Achieving State of the Art

Author:

Aden Ilyas1ORCID,Child Christopher H. T.1ORCID,Reyes-Aldasoro Constantino Carlos1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Computer Science, City, University of London, Northampton Square, London EC1V 0HB, UK

Abstract

The International Classification of Diseases (ICD) serves as a widely employed framework for assigning diagnosis codes to electronic health records of patients. These codes facilitate the encapsulation of diagnoses and procedures conducted during a patient’s hospitalisation. This study aims to devise a predictive model for ICD codes based on the MIMIC-III clinical text dataset. Leveraging natural language processing techniques and deep learning architectures, we constructed a pipeline to distill pertinent information from the MIMIC-III dataset: the Medical Information Mart for Intensive Care III (MIMIC-III), a sizable, de-identified, and publicly accessible repository of medical records. Our method entails predicting diagnosis codes from unstructured data, such as discharge summaries and notes encompassing symptoms. We used state-of-the-art deep learning algorithms, such as recurrent neural networks (RNNs), long short-term memory (LSTM) networks, bidirectional LSTM (BiLSTM) and BERT models after tokenizing the clinical test with Bio-ClinicalBERT, a pre-trained model from Hugging Face. To evaluate the efficacy of our approach, we conducted experiments utilizing the discharge dataset within MIMIC-III. Employing the BERT model, our methodology exhibited commendable accuracy in predicting the top 10 and top 50 diagnosis codes within the MIMIC-III dataset, achieving average accuracies of 88% and 80%, respectively. In comparison to recent studies by Biseda and Kerang, as well as Gangavarapu, which reported F1 scores of 0.72 in predicting the top 10 ICD-10 codes, our model demonstrated better performance, with an F1 score of 0.87. Similarly, in predicting the top 50 ICD-10 codes, previous research achieved an F1 score of 0.75, whereas our method attained an F1 score of 0.81. These results underscore the better performance of deep learning models over conventional machine learning approaches in this domain, thus validating our findings. The ability to predict diagnoses early from clinical notes holds promise in assisting doctors or physicians in determining effective treatments, thereby reshaping the conventional paradigm of diagnosis-then-treatment care. Our code is available online.

Publisher

MDPI AG

Reference24 articles.

1. National Health Service (2024, January 10). International Statistical Classification of Diseases and Related Health Problems, 10th Revision (ICD-10), 5th Edition. Available online: https://classbrowser.nhs.uk/ref_books/ICD-10_2022_5th_Ed_NCCS.pdf.

2. PhysioNet (2024, January 12). MIMIC-III Clinical Database (Version 1.4). Available online: https://physionet.org/content/mimiciii/1.4/.

3. Mullenbach, J., Wiegreffe, S., Duke, J., Sun, J., and Eisenstein, J. (2018). Explainable Prediction of Medical Codes from Clinical Text. arXiv.

4. An empirical evaluation of deep learning for ICD-9 code assignment using MIMIC-III clinical notes;Huang;Comput. Methods Programs Biomed.,2019

5. Biswas, B., Pham, T.-H., and Zhang, P. (2021). TransICD: Transformer Based Code-wise Attention Model for Explainable ICD Coding. arXiv.

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