Machine learning facilitates the prediction of long-term mortality in patients with tricuspid regurgitation

Author:

Deb BrototoORCID,Scott ChristopherORCID,Pislaru Sorin V,Nkomo Vuyisile T,Kane Garvan Christopher,Alkhouli MohamadORCID,Crestanello Juan A,Arruda-Olson Adelaide,Pellikka Patricia A,Anand Vidhu

Abstract

ObjectiveTricuspid regurgitation (TR) is a prevalent valve disease associated with significant morbidity and mortality. We aimed to apply machine learning (ML) to assess risk stratification in patients with ≥moderate TR.MethodsPatients with ≥moderate TR on echocardiogram between January 2005 and December 2016 were retrospectively included. We used 70% of data to train ML-based survival models including 27 clinical and echocardiographic features to predict mortality over a 3-year period on an independent test set (30%). To account for differences in baseline comorbidities, prediction was performed in groups stratified by increasing Charlson Comorbidity Index (CCI). Permutation feature importance was calculated using the best-performing model separately in these groups.ResultsOf 13 312 patients, mean age 72 ± 13 years and 7406 (55%) women, 7409 (56%) had moderate, 2646 (20%) had moderate–severe and 3257 (24%) had severe TR. The overall performance for 1-year mortality by 3 ML models was good, c-statistic 0.74–0.75. Interestingly, performance varied between CCI groups, (c-statistic = 0.774 in lowest CCI group and 0.661 in highest CCI group). The performance decreased over 3-year follow-up (average c-index 0.78). Furthermore, the top 10 features contributing to these predictions varied slightly with the CCI group, the top features included heart rate, right ventricular systolic pressure, blood pressure, diuretic use and age.ConclusionsMachine learning of common clinical and echocardiographic features can evaluate mortality risk in patients with TR. Further refinement of models and validation in prospective studies are needed before incorporation into the clinical practice.

Funder

Department of Cardiovascular Ultrasound, Mayo Clinic

Publisher

BMJ

Subject

Cardiology and Cardiovascular Medicine

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