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Large Language Model Capabilities in Perioperative Risk Prediction and Prognostication.
Chung, Philip; Fong, Christine T; Walters, Andrew M; Aghaeepour, Nima; Yetisgen, Meliha; O'Reilly-Shah, Vikas N.
Affiliation
  • Chung P; Department of Anesthesiology, Perioperative & Pain Medicine, Stanford University, Stanford, California.
  • Fong CT; Department of Anesthesiology & Pain Medicine, University of Washington, Seattle.
  • Walters AM; Department of Anesthesiology & Pain Medicine, University of Washington, Seattle.
  • Aghaeepour N; Department of Anesthesiology, Perioperative & Pain Medicine, Stanford University, Stanford, California.
  • Yetisgen M; Department of Biomedical & Health Informatics, University of Washington, Seattle.
  • O'Reilly-Shah VN; Department of Linguistics, University of Washington, Seattle.
JAMA Surg ; 159(8): 928-937, 2024 Aug 01.
Article in En | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38837145
ABSTRACT
Importance General-domain large language models may be able to perform risk stratification and predict postoperative outcome measures using a description of the procedure and a patient's electronic health record notes.

Objective:

To examine predictive performance on 8 different tasks prediction of American Society of Anesthesiologists Physical Status (ASA-PS), hospital admission, intensive care unit (ICU) admission, unplanned admission, hospital mortality, postanesthesia care unit (PACU) phase 1 duration, hospital duration, and ICU duration. Design, Setting, and

Participants:

This prognostic study included task-specific datasets constructed from 2 years of retrospective electronic health records data collected during routine clinical care. Case and note data were formatted into prompts and given to the large language model GPT-4 Turbo (OpenAI) to generate a prediction and explanation. The setting included a quaternary care center comprising 3 academic hospitals and affiliated clinics in a single metropolitan area. Patients who had a surgery or procedure with anesthesia and at least 1 clinician-written note filed in the electronic health record before surgery were included in the study. Data were analyzed from November to December 2023. Exposures Compared original notes, note summaries, few-shot prompting, and chain-of-thought prompting strategies. Main Outcomes and

Measures:

F1 score for binary and categorical outcomes. Mean absolute error for numerical duration outcomes.

Results:

Study results were measured on task-specific datasets, each with 1000 cases with the exception of unplanned admission, which had 949 cases, and hospital mortality, which had 576 cases. The best results for each task included an F1 score of 0.50 (95% CI, 0.47-0.53) for ASA-PS, 0.64 (95% CI, 0.61-0.67) for hospital admission, 0.81 (95% CI, 0.78-0.83) for ICU admission, 0.61 (95% CI, 0.58-0.64) for unplanned admission, and 0.86 (95% CI, 0.83-0.89) for hospital mortality prediction. Performance on duration prediction tasks was universally poor across all prompt strategies for which the large language model achieved a mean absolute error of 49 minutes (95% CI, 46-51 minutes) for PACU phase 1 duration, 4.5 days (95% CI, 4.2-5.0 days) for hospital duration, and 1.1 days (95% CI, 0.9-1.3 days) for ICU duration prediction. Conclusions and Relevance Current general-domain large language models may assist clinicians in perioperative risk stratification on classification tasks but are inadequate for numerical duration predictions. Their ability to produce high-quality natural language explanations for the predictions may make them useful tools in clinical workflows and may be complementary to traditional risk prediction models.
Subject(s)

Full text: 1 Collection: 01-internacional Database: MEDLINE Main subject: Electronic Health Records Limits: Aged / Female / Humans / Male / Middle aged Language: En Journal: JAMA Surg Year: 2024 Document type: Article Country of publication: Estados Unidos

Full text: 1 Collection: 01-internacional Database: MEDLINE Main subject: Electronic Health Records Limits: Aged / Female / Humans / Male / Middle aged Language: En Journal: JAMA Surg Year: 2024 Document type: Article Country of publication: Estados Unidos