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      Unfolding Physiological State: Mortality Modelling in Intensive Care Units.

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          Abstract

          Accurate knowledge of a patient's disease state and trajectory is critical in a clinical setting. Modern electronic healthcare records contain an increasingly large amount of data, and the ability to automatically identify the factors that influence patient outcomes stand to greatly improve the efficiency and quality of care. We examined the use of latent variable models (viz. Latent Dirichlet Allocation) to decompose free-text hospital notes into meaningful features, and the predictive power of these features for patient mortality. We considered three prediction regimes: (1) baseline prediction, (2) dynamic (time-varying) outcome prediction, and (3) retrospective outcome prediction. In each, our prediction task differs from the familiar time-varying situation whereby data accumulates; since fewer patients have long ICU stays, as we move forward in time fewer patients are available and the prediction task becomes increasingly difficult. We found that latent topic-derived features were effective in determining patient mortality under three timelines: inhospital, 30 day post-discharge, and 1 year post-discharge mortality. Our results demonstrated that the latent topic features important in predicting hospital mortality are very different from those that are important in post-discharge mortality. In general, latent topic features were more predictive than structured features, and a combination of the two performed best. The time-varying models that combined latent topic features and baseline features had AUCs that reached 0.85, 0.80, and 0.77 for in-hospital, 30 day post-discharge and 1 year post-discharge mortality respectively. Our results agreed with other work suggesting that the first 24 hours of patient information are often the most predictive of hospital mortality. Retrospective models that used a combination of latent topic features and structured features achieved AUCs of 0.96, 0.82, and 0.81 for in-hospital, 30 day, and 1-year mortality prediction. Our work focuses on the dynamic (time-varying) setting because models from this regime could facilitate an on-going severity stratification system that helps direct care-staff resources and inform treatment strategies.

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          Author and article information

          Journal
          KDD
          KDD : proceedings. International Conference on Knowledge Discovery & Data Mining
          Association for Computing Machinery (ACM)
          2154-817X
          2154-817X
          Aug 24 2014
          : 2014
          Affiliations
          [1 ] Massachusetts Institute of Technology 77 Massachusetts Ave. Cambridge, MA 02139 USA mghassem@mit.edu.
          [2 ] Massachusetts Institute of Technology 77 Massachusetts Ave. Cambridge, MA 02139 USA tjn@mit.edu.
          [3 ] Harvard 10 Shattuck Street Boston, MA 02115 USA finale@alum.mit.edu.
          [4 ] Massachusetts Institute of Technology 77 Massachusetts Ave. Cambridge, MA 02139 USA nbrimmer@mit.edu.
          [5 ] Massachusetts Institute of Technology 77 Massachusetts Ave. Cambridge, MA 02139 USA rjoshi@mit.edu.
          [6 ] University of Massachusetts Lowell One University Ave. Lowell, MA 01854 USA arum@cs.uml.edu.
          [7 ] Massachusetts Institute of Technology 77 Massachusetts Ave. Cambridge, MA 02139 USA psz@mit.edu.
          Article
          NIHMS611991
          10.1145/2623330.2623742
          4185189
          25289175
          73a7cee9-1876-4f7f-8431-8ba3cc6fb1ab
          History

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