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1.
Artif Intell Med ; 147: 102742, 2024 01.
Article En | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38184349

Reinforcement Learning (RL) has recently found many applications in the healthcare domain thanks to its natural fit to clinical decision-making and ability to learn optimal decisions from observational data. A key challenge in adopting RL-based solution in clinical practice, however, is the inclusion of existing knowledge in learning a suitable solution. Existing knowledge from e.g. medical guidelines may improve the safety of solutions, produce a better balance between short- and long-term outcomes for patients and increase trust and adoption by clinicians. We present a framework for including knowledge available from medical guidelines in RL. The framework includes components for enforcing safety constraints and an approach that alters the learning signal to better balance short- and long-term outcomes based on these guidelines. We evaluate the framework by extending an existing RL-based mechanical ventilation (MV) approach with clinically established ventilation guidelines. Results from off-policy policy evaluation indicate that our approach has the potential to decrease 90-day mortality while ensuring lung protective ventilation. This framework provides an important stepping stone towards implementations of RL in clinical practice and opens up several avenues for further research.


Learning , Respiration, Artificial , Humans , Reinforcement, Psychology , Critical Care , Clinical Decision-Making
2.
Crit Care Med ; 52(2): e79-e88, 2024 02 01.
Article En | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37938042

OBJECTIVE: Reinforcement learning (RL) is a machine learning technique uniquely effective at sequential decision-making, which makes it potentially relevant to ICU treatment challenges. We set out to systematically review, assess level-of-readiness and meta-analyze the effect of RL on outcomes for critically ill patients. DATA SOURCES: A systematic search was performed in PubMed, Embase.com, Clarivate Analytics/Web of Science Core Collection, Elsevier/SCOPUS and the Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers Xplore Digital Library from inception to March 25, 2022, with subsequent citation tracking. DATA EXTRACTION: Journal articles that used an RL technique in an ICU population and reported on patient health-related outcomes were included for full analysis. Conference papers were included for level-of-readiness assessment only. Descriptive statistics, characteristics of the models, outcome compared with clinician's policy and level-of-readiness were collected. RL-health risk of bias and applicability assessment was performed. DATA SYNTHESIS: A total of 1,033 articles were screened, of which 18 journal articles and 18 conference papers, were included. Thirty of those were prototyping or modeling articles and six were validation articles. All articles reported RL algorithms to outperform clinical decision-making by ICU professionals, but only in retrospective data. The modeling techniques for the state-space, action-space, reward function, RL model training, and evaluation varied widely. The risk of bias was high in all articles, mainly due to the evaluation procedure. CONCLUSION: In this first systematic review on the application of RL in intensive care medicine we found no studies that demonstrated improved patient outcomes from RL-based technologies. All studies reported that RL-agent policies outperformed clinician policies, but such assessments were all based on retrospective off-policy evaluation.


Critical Care , Critical Illness , Humans , Critical Illness/therapy , Retrospective Studies
3.
Int J Med Inform ; 179: 105233, 2023 Nov.
Article En | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37748329

INTRODUCTION: With the advent of artificial intelligence, the secondary use of routinely collected medical data from electronic healthcare records (EHR) has become increasingly popular. However, different EHR systems typically use different names for the same medical concepts. This obviously hampers scalable model development and subsequent clinical implementation for decision support. Therefore, converting original parameter names to a so-called ontology, a standardized set of predefined concepts, is necessary but time-consuming and labor-intensive. We therefore propose an augmented intelligence approach to facilitate ontology alignment by predicting correct concepts based on parameter names from raw electronic health record data exports. METHODS: We used the manually mapped parameter names from the multicenter "Dutch ICU data warehouse against COVID-19" sourced from three types of EHR systems to train machine learning models for concept mapping. Data from 29 intensive care units on 38,824 parameters mapped to 1,679 relevant and unique concepts and 38,069 parameters labeled as irrelevant were used for model development and validation. We used the Natural Language Toolkit (NLTK) to preprocess the parameter names based on WordNet cognitive synonyms transformed by term-frequency inverse document frequency (TF-IDF), yielding numeric features. We then trained linear classifiers using stochastic gradient descent for multi-class prediction. Finally, we fine-tuned these predictions using information on distributions of the data associated with each parameter name through similarity score and skewness comparisons. RESULTS: The initial model, trained using data from one hospital organization for each of three EHR systems, scored an overall top 1 precision of 0.744, recall of 0.771, and F1-score of 0.737 on a total of 58,804 parameters. Leave-one-hospital-out analysis returned an average top 1 recall of 0.680 for relevant parameters, which increased to 0.905 for the top 5 predictions. When reducing the training dataset to only include relevant parameters, top 1 recall was 0.811 and top 5 recall was 0.914 for relevant parameters. Performance improvement based on similarity score or skewness comparisons affected at most 5.23% of numeric parameters. CONCLUSION: Augmented intelligence is a promising method to improve concept mapping of parameter names from raw electronic health record data exports. We propose a robust method for mapping data across various domains, facilitating the integration of diverse data sources. However, recall is not perfect, and therefore manual validation of mapping remains essential.

4.
JACC Clin Electrophysiol ; 9(8 Pt 1): 1368-1378, 2023 08.
Article En | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37141904

BACKGROUND: Implantable cardioverter-defibrillators (ICDs) are frequently used for primary and secondary prevention in patients with cardiomyopathies due to different etiologies. However, long-term outcome studies in patients with noncompaction cardiomyopathy (NCCM) are scarce. OBJECTIVES: This study summarizes the long-term outcome of ICD therapy in patients with NCCM compared with those with dilated cardiomyopathy (DCM) or hypertrophic cardiomyopathy (HCM). METHODS: Prospective data from our single-center ICD registry were used to analyze the ICD interventions and survival in patients with NCCM (n = 68) compared with patients with DCM (n = 458) and patients with HCM (n = 158) from January 2005 to January 2018. RESULTS: This NCCM population with an ICD for primary prevention comprised 56 (82%) patients with a median age of 43 years and 52% males, compared with 85% in patients with DCM and 79% in patients with HCM (P = 0.20). During a median follow-up of 5 years (IQR: 2.0-6.9 years), appropriate and inappropriate ICD interventions were not significantly different. Nonsustained ventricular tachycardia during Holter monitoring in patients with NCCM was the only significant risk factor for appropriate ICD therapy in patients with NCCM, with a HR of 5.29 (95% CI: 1.12-24.96). The long-term survival was significantly better in the univariable analysis in the NCCM group. However, there was no difference in multivariable Cox regression analyses between the cardiomyopathy groups. CONCLUSIONS: At 5 years of follow-up, the rate of appropriate and inappropriate ICD interventions in NCCM was comparable to that in DCM or HCM. In multivariable analysis, no differences in survival were found between the cardiomyopathy groups.


Cardiomyopathies , Cardiomyopathy, Dilated , Cardiomyopathy, Hypertrophic , Defibrillators, Implantable , Male , Humans , Adult , Female , Cardiomyopathy, Dilated/complications , Cardiomyopathy, Dilated/therapy , Prospective Studies , Cardiomyopathies/complications , Cardiomyopathies/therapy , Cardiomyopathy, Hypertrophic/complications , Cardiomyopathy, Hypertrophic/therapy , Risk Factors
5.
Ann Intensive Care ; 12(1): 99, 2022 Oct 20.
Article En | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36264358

BACKGROUND: For mechanically ventilated critically ill COVID-19 patients, prone positioning has quickly become an important treatment strategy, however, prone positioning is labor intensive and comes with potential adverse effects. Therefore, identifying which critically ill intubated COVID-19 patients will benefit may help allocate labor resources. METHODS: From the multi-center Dutch Data Warehouse of COVID-19 ICU patients from 25 hospitals, we selected all 3619 episodes of prone positioning in 1142 invasively mechanically ventilated patients. We excluded episodes longer than 24 h. Berlin ARDS criteria were not formally documented. We used supervised machine learning algorithms Logistic Regression, Random Forest, Naive Bayes, K-Nearest Neighbors, Support Vector Machine and Extreme Gradient Boosting on readily available and clinically relevant features to predict success of prone positioning after 4 h (window of 1 to 7 h) based on various possible outcomes. These outcomes were defined as improvements of at least 10% in PaO2/FiO2 ratio, ventilatory ratio, respiratory system compliance, or mechanical power. Separate models were created for each of these outcomes. Re-supination within 4 h after pronation was labeled as failure. We also developed models using a 20 mmHg improvement cut-off for PaO2/FiO2 ratio and using a combined outcome parameter. For all models, we evaluated feature importance expressed as contribution to predictive performance based on their relative ranking. RESULTS: The median duration of prone episodes was 17 h (11-20, median and IQR, N = 2632). Despite extensive modeling using a plethora of machine learning techniques and a large number of potentially clinically relevant features, discrimination between responders and non-responders remained poor with an area under the receiver operator characteristic curve of 0.62 for PaO2/FiO2 ratio using Logistic Regression, Random Forest and XGBoost. Feature importance was inconsistent between models for different outcomes. Notably, not even being a previous responder to prone positioning, or PEEP-levels before prone positioning, provided any meaningful contribution to predicting a successful next proning episode. CONCLUSIONS: In mechanically ventilated COVID-19 patients, predicting the success of prone positioning using clinically relevant and readily available parameters from electronic health records is currently not feasible. Given the current evidence base, a liberal approach to proning in all patients with severe COVID-19 ARDS is therefore justified and in particular regardless of previous results of proning.

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