Explainable Tree-Based Predictions for Unplanned 30-Day Readmission of Patients With Cancer Using Clinical Embeddings

Author:

Wong Chi Wah1,Chen Chen1,Rossi Lorenzo A.1,Abila Monga2,Munu Janet2,Nakamura Ryotaro3,Eftekhari Zahra1

Affiliation:

1. Department of Applied AI and Data Science, City of Hope National Medical Center, Duarte, CA

2. Department of Clinical Informatics, City of Hope National Medical Center, Duarte, CA

3. Department of Hematology and HCT, City of Hope National Medical Center, Duarte, CA

Abstract

PURPOSE Thirty-day unplanned readmission is one of the key components in measuring quality in patient care. Risk of readmission in oncology patients may be associated with a wide variety of specific factors including laboratory results and diagnoses, and it is hard to include all such features using traditional approaches such as one-hot encoding in predictive models. METHODS We used clinical embeddings to represent complex medical concepts in lower dimensional spaces. For predictive modeling, we used gradient-boosted trees and adopted the shapley additive explanation framework to offer consistent individualized predictions. We used retrospective inpatient data between 2013 and 2018 with temporal split for training and testing. RESULTS Our best performing model predicting readmission at discharge using clinical embeddings showed a testing area under receiver operating characteristic curve of 0.78 (95% CI, 0.77 to 0.80). Use of clinical embeddings led to up to 23.1% gain in area under precision-recall curve and 6% in area under receiver operating characteristic curve. Hematology models had more performance gain over surgery and medical oncology. Our study was the first to develop (1) explainable predictive models for the hematology population and (2) dynamic models to keep track of readmission risk throughout the duration of patient visit. CONCLUSION To our knowledge, our study was the first to develop (1) explainable predictive models for the hematology population and (2) dynamic models to keep track of readmission risk throughout the duration of patient visit.

Publisher

American Society of Clinical Oncology (ASCO)

Subject

General Medicine

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