Using machine learning to develop smart reflex testing protocols

Author:

McDermott Matthew12,Dighe Anand345,Szolovits Peter1,Luo Yuan6ORCID,Baron Jason34ORCID

Affiliation:

1. MIT Computer Science and Artificial Intelligence Lab , Boston, MA 02139, United States

2. Department of Biomedical Informatics, Harvard Medical School , Boston, MA 02115, United States

3. Department of Pathology, Massachusetts General Hospital , Boston, MA 02114, United States

4. Harvard Medical School , Boston, MA, United States

5. MGB HealthCare System , Somerville, MA 02145, United States

6. Department of Preventive Medicine, Northwestern University , Chicago, IL 60611, United States

Abstract

Abstract Objective Reflex testing protocols allow clinical laboratories to perform second line diagnostic tests on existing specimens based on the results of initially ordered tests. Reflex testing can support optimal clinical laboratory test ordering and diagnosis. In current clinical practice, reflex testing typically relies on simple “if-then” rules; however, this limits the opportunities for reflex testing since most test ordering decisions involve more complexity than traditional rule-based approaches would allow. Here, using the analyte ferritin as an example, we propose an alternative machine learning-based approach to “smart” reflex testing. Methods Using deidentified patient data, we developed a machine learning model to predict whether a patient getting CBC testing will also have ferritin testing ordered. We evaluate applications of this model to reflex testing by assessing its performance in comparison to possible rule-based approaches. Results Our underlying machine learning models performed moderately well in predicting ferritin test ordering (AUC=0.731 in reference to actual ordering) and demonstrated promising potential to underlie key clinical applications. In contrast, none of the many traditionally framed, rule-based, hypothetical reflex protocols we evaluated offered sufficient agreement with actual ordering to be clinically feasible. Using chart review, we further demonstrated that the strategic deployment of our model could avoid important ferritin test ordering errors. Conclusions Machine learning may provide a foundation for new types of reflex testing with enhanced benefits for clinical diagnosis.

Funder

National Library Medicine

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Subject

Health Informatics

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