Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: https://doi.org/10.2196/30805
Title: Health Care Analytics With Time-Invariant and Time-Variant Feature Importance to Predict Hospital-Acquired Acute Kidney Injury: Observational Longitudinal Study
Authors: Chua, Horng-Ruey 
Zheng, Kaiping 
Vathsala, Anantharaman 
Ngiam, Kee-Yuan 
Yap, Hui-Kim 
Lu, Liangjian
Tiong, Ho-Yee 
Mukhopadhyay, Amartya 
MacLaren, Graeme
Lim, Shir-Lynn 
Akalya, K 
Ooi, Beng-Chin 
Keywords: Science & Technology
Life Sciences & Biomedicine
Health Care Sciences & Services
Medical Informatics
acute kidney injury
artificial intelligence
biomarkers
clinical deterioration
electronic health records
hospital medicine
machine learning
CONTRAST-INDUCED NEPHROPATHY
INTERVENTION
PROGRAM
TRENDS
Issue Date: 24-Dec-2021
Publisher: JMIR PUBLICATIONS, INC
Citation: Chua, Horng-Ruey, Zheng, Kaiping, Vathsala, Anantharaman, Ngiam, Kee-Yuan, Yap, Hui-Kim, Lu, Liangjian, Tiong, Ho-Yee, Mukhopadhyay, Amartya, MacLaren, Graeme, Lim, Shir-Lynn, Akalya, K, Ooi, Beng-Chin (2021-12-24). Health Care Analytics With Time-Invariant and Time-Variant Feature Importance to Predict Hospital-Acquired Acute Kidney Injury: Observational Longitudinal Study. JOURNAL OF MEDICAL INTERNET RESEARCH 23 (12). ScholarBank@NUS Repository. https://doi.org/10.2196/30805
Abstract: Background: Acute kidney injury (AKI) develops in 4% of hospitalized patients and is a marker of clinical deterioration and nephrotoxicity. AKI onset is highly variable in hospitals, which makes it difficult to time biomarker assessment in all patients for preemptive care. Objective: The study sought to apply machine learning techniques to electronic health records and predict hospital-acquired AKI by a 48-hour lead time, with the aim to create an AKI surveillance algorithm that is deployable in real time. Methods: The data were sourced from 20,732 case admissions in 16,288 patients over 1 year in our institution. We enhanced the bidirectional recurrent neural network model with a novel time-invariant and time-variant aggregated module to capture important clinical features temporal to AKI in every patient. Time-series features included laboratory parameters that preceded a 48-hour prediction window before AKI onset; the latter's corresponding reference was the final in-hospital serum creatinine performed in case admissions without AKI episodes. Results: The cohort was of mean age 53 (SD 25) years, of whom 29%, 12%, 12%, and 53% had diabetes, ischemic heart disease, cancers, and baseline eGFR <90 mL/min/1.73 m2, respectively. There were 911 AKI episodes in 869 patients. We derived and validated an algorithm in the testing dataset with an AUROC of 0.81 (0.78-0.85) for predicting AKI. At a 15% prediction threshold, our model generated 699 AKI alerts with 2 false positives for every true AKI and predicted 26% of AKIs. A lowered 5% prediction threshold improved the recall to 60% but generated 3746 AKI alerts with 6 false positives for every true AKI. Representative interpretation results produced by our model alluded to the top-ranked features that predicted AKI that could be categorized in association with sepsis, acute coronary syndrome, nephrotoxicity, or multiorgan injury, specific to every case at risk. Conclusions: We generated an accurate algorithm from electronic health records through machine learning that predicted AKI by a lead time of at least 48 hours. The prediction threshold could be adjusted during deployment to optimize recall and minimize alert fatigue, while its precision could potentially be augmented by targeted AKI biomarker assessment in the high-risk cohort identified.
Source Title: JOURNAL OF MEDICAL INTERNET RESEARCH
URI: https://scholarbank.nus.edu.sg/handle/10635/217001
ISSN: 1438-8871
DOI: 10.2196/30805
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