Back to Search Start Over

Development of machine-learning algorithms for 90-day and one-year mortality prediction in the elderly with femoral neck fractures based on the HEALTH and FAITH trials

Authors :
Hidde Dijkstra
Jacobien H. F. Oosterhoff
Anouk van de Kuit
Frank F. A. IJpma
Joseph H. Schwab
Rudolf W. Poolman
Sheila Sprague
Sofia Bzovsky
Mohit Bhandari
Marc Swiontkowski
Emil H. Schemitsch
Job N. Doornberg
Laurent A. M. Hendrickx
Source :
Bone & Joint Open. 4:168-181
Publication Year :
2023
Publisher :
British Editorial Society of Bone & Joint Surgery, 2023.

Abstract

AimsTo develop prediction models using machine-learning (ML) algorithms for 90-day and one-year mortality prediction in femoral neck fracture (FNF) patients aged 50 years or older based on the Hip fracture Evaluation with Alternatives of Total Hip arthroplasty versus Hemiarthroplasty (HEALTH) and Fixation using Alternative Implants for the Treatment of Hip fractures (FAITH) trials.MethodsThis study included 2,388 patients from the HEALTH and FAITH trials, with 90-day and one-year mortality proportions of 3.0% (71/2,388) and 6.4% (153/2,388), respectively. The mean age was 75.9 years (SD 10.8) and 65.9% of patients (1,574/2,388) were female. The algorithms included patient and injury characteristics. Six algorithms were developed, internally validated and evaluated across discrimination (c-statistic; discriminative ability between those with risk of mortality and those without), calibration (observed outcome compared to the predicted probability), and the Brier score (composite of discrimination and calibration).ResultsThe developed algorithms distinguished between patients at high and low risk for 90-day and one-year mortality. The penalized logistic regression algorithm had the best performance metrics for both 90-day (c-statistic 0.80, calibration slope 0.95, calibration intercept -0.06, and Brier score 0.039) and one-year (c-statistic 0.76, calibration slope 0.86, calibration intercept -0.20, and Brier score 0.074) mortality prediction in the hold-out set.ConclusionUsing high-quality data, the ML-based prediction models accurately predicted 90-day and one-year mortality in patients aged 50 years or older with a FNF. The final models must be externally validated to assess generalizability to other populations, and prospectively evaluated in the process of shared decision-making.Cite this article: Bone Jt Open 2023;4(3):168–181.

Details

ISSN :
26331462
Volume :
4
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Bone & Joint Open
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....a2a8bb059ed5c59cbe9d6efbcd56a8c5