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Seek COVER: using a disease proxy to rapidly develop and validate a personalized risk calculator for COVID-19 outcomes in an international network

Authors :
Ross D. Williams
Aniek F. Markus
Cynthia Yang
Talita Duarte-Salles
Scott L. DuVall
Thomas Falconer
Jitendra Jonnagaddala
Chungsoo Kim
Yeunsook Rho
Andrew E. Williams
Amanda Alberga Machado
Min Ho An
María Aragón
Carlos Areia
Edward Burn
Young Hwa Choi
Iannis Drakos
Maria Tereza Fernandes Abrahão
Sergio Fernández-Bertolín
George Hripcsak
Benjamin Skov Kaas-Hansen
Prasanna L. Kandukuri
Jan A. Kors
Kristin Kostka
Siaw-Teng Liaw
Kristine E. Lynch
Gerardo Machnicki
Michael E. Matheny
Daniel Morales
Fredrik Nyberg
Rae Woong Park
Albert Prats-Uribe
Nicole Pratt
Gowtham Rao
Christian G. Reich
Marcela Rivera
Tom Seinen
Azza Shoaibi
Matthew E. Spotnitz
Ewout W. Steyerberg
Marc A. Suchard
Seng Chan You
Lin Zhang
Lili Zhou
Patrick B. Ryan
Daniel Prieto-Alhambra
Jenna M. Reps
Peter R. Rijnbeek
Source :
BMC Medical Research Methodology, Vol 22, Iss 1, Pp 1-13 (2022)
Publication Year :
2022
Publisher :
BMC, 2022.

Abstract

Abstract Background We investigated whether we could use influenza data to develop prediction models for COVID-19 to increase the speed at which prediction models can reliably be developed and validated early in a pandemic. We developed COVID-19 Estimated Risk (COVER) scores that quantify a patient’s risk of hospital admission with pneumonia (COVER-H), hospitalization with pneumonia requiring intensive services or death (COVER-I), or fatality (COVER-F) in the 30-days following COVID-19 diagnosis using historical data from patients with influenza or flu-like symptoms and tested this in COVID-19 patients. Methods We analyzed a federated network of electronic medical records and administrative claims data from 14 data sources and 6 countries containing data collected on or before 4/27/2020. We used a 2-step process to develop 3 scores using historical data from patients with influenza or flu-like symptoms any time prior to 2020. The first step was to create a data-driven model using LASSO regularized logistic regression, the covariates of which were used to develop aggregate covariates for the second step where the COVER scores were developed using a smaller set of features. These 3 COVER scores were then externally validated on patients with 1) influenza or flu-like symptoms and 2) confirmed or suspected COVID-19 diagnosis across 5 databases from South Korea, Spain, and the United States. Outcomes included i) hospitalization with pneumonia, ii) hospitalization with pneumonia requiring intensive services or death, and iii) death in the 30 days after index date. Results Overall, 44,507 COVID-19 patients were included for model validation. We identified 7 predictors (history of cancer, chronic obstructive pulmonary disease, diabetes, heart disease, hypertension, hyperlipidemia, kidney disease) which combined with age and sex discriminated which patients would experience any of our three outcomes. The models achieved good performance in influenza and COVID-19 cohorts. For COVID-19 the AUC ranges were, COVER-H: 0.69–0.81, COVER-I: 0.73–0.91, and COVER-F: 0.72–0.90. Calibration varied across the validations with some of the COVID-19 validations being less well calibrated than the influenza validations. Conclusions This research demonstrated the utility of using a proxy disease to develop a prediction model. The 3 COVER models with 9-predictors that were developed using influenza data perform well for COVID-19 patients for predicting hospitalization, intensive services, and fatality. The scores showed good discriminatory performance which transferred well to the COVID-19 population. There was some miscalibration in the COVID-19 validations, which is potentially due to the difference in symptom severity between the two diseases. A possible solution for this is to recalibrate the models in each location before use.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
14712288
Volume :
22
Issue :
1
Database :
Directory of Open Access Journals
Journal :
BMC Medical Research Methodology
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
edsdoj.152b2f9d8848c687fd69d67eb875e5
Document Type :
article
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1186/s12874-022-01505-z