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Machine learning-based prediction of in-hospital death for patients with takotsubo syndrome: The InterTAK-ML model.

Authors :
De Filippo O
Cammann VL
Pancotti C
Di Vece D
Silverio A
Schweiger V
Niederseer D
Szawan KA
Würdinger M
Koleva I
Dusi V
Bellino M
Vecchione C
Parodi G
Bossone E
Gili S
Neuhaus M
Franke J
Meder B
Jaguszewski M
Noutsias M
Knorr M
Jansen T
Dichtl W
von Lewinski D
Burgdorf C
Kherad B
Tschöpe C
Sarcon A
Shinbane J
Rajan L
Michels G
Pfister R
Cuneo A
Jacobshagen C
Karakas M
Koenig W
Pott A
Meyer P
Roffi M
Banning A
Wolfrum M
Cuculi F
Kobza R
Fischer TA
Vasankari T
Airaksinen KEJ
Napp LC
Dworakowski R
MacCarthy P
Kaiser C
Osswald S
Galiuto L
Chan C
Bridgman P
Beug D
Delmas C
Lairez O
Gilyarova E
Shilova A
Gilyarov M
El-Battrawy I
Akin I
Poledniková K
Toušek P
Winchester DE
Massoomi M
Galuszka J
Ukena C
Poglajen G
Carrilho-Ferreira P
Hauck C
Paolini C
Bilato C
Kobayashi Y
Kato K
Ishibashi I
Himi T
Din J
Al-Shammari A
Prasad A
Rihal CS
Liu K
Schulze PC
Bianco M
Jörg L
Rickli H
Pestana G
Nguyen TH
Böhm M
Maier LS
Pinto FJ
Widimský P
Felix SB
Braun-Dullaeus RC
Rottbauer W
Hasenfuß G
Pieske BM
Schunkert H
Budnik M
Opolski G
Thiele H
Bauersachs J
Horowitz JD
Di Mario C
Bruno F
Kong W
Dalakoti M
Imori Y
Münzel T
Crea F
Lüscher TF
Bax JJ
Ruschitzka F
De Ferrari GM
Fariselli P
Ghadri JR
Citro R
D'Ascenzo F
Templin C
Source :
European journal of heart failure [Eur J Heart Fail] 2023 Dec; Vol. 25 (12), pp. 2299-2311. Date of Electronic Publication: 2023 Sep 18.
Publication Year :
2023

Abstract

Aims: Takotsubo syndrome (TTS) is associated with a substantial rate of adverse events. We sought to design a machine learning (ML)-based model to predict the risk of in-hospital death and to perform a clustering of TTS patients to identify different risk profiles.<br />Methods and Results: A ridge logistic regression-based ML model for predicting in-hospital death was developed on 3482 TTS patients from the International Takotsubo (InterTAK) Registry, randomly split in a train and an internal validation cohort (75% and 25% of the sample size, respectively) and evaluated in an external validation cohort (1037 patients). Thirty-one clinically relevant variables were included in the prediction model. Model performance represented the primary endpoint and was assessed according to area under the curve (AUC), sensitivity and specificity. As secondary endpoint, a K-medoids clustering algorithm was designed to stratify patients into phenotypic groups based on the 10 most relevant features emerging from the main model. The overall incidence of in-hospital death was 5.2%. The InterTAK-ML model showed an AUC of 0.89 (0.85-0.92), a sensitivity of 0.85 (0.78-0.95) and a specificity of 0.76 (0.74-0.79) in the internal validation cohort and an AUC of 0.82 (0.73-0.91), a sensitivity of 0.74 (0.61-0.87) and a specificity of 0.79 (0.77-0.81) in the external cohort for in-hospital death prediction. By exploiting the 10 variables showing the highest feature importance, TTS patients were clustered into six groups associated with different risks of in-hospital death (28.8% vs. 15.5% vs. 5.4% vs. 1.0.8% vs. 0.5%) which were consistent also in the external cohort.<br />Conclusion: A ML-based approach for the identification of TTS patients at risk of adverse short-term prognosis is feasible and effective. The InterTAK-ML model showed unprecedented discriminative capability for the prediction of in-hospital death.<br /> (© 2023 The Authors. European Journal of Heart Failure published by John Wiley & Sons Ltd on behalf of European Society of Cardiology.)

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
1879-0844
Volume :
25
Issue :
12
Database :
MEDLINE
Journal :
European journal of heart failure
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
37522520
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1002/ejhf.2983