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Developing well-calibrated illness severity scores for decision support in the critically ill

Authors :
Harvard University--MIT Division of Health Sciences and Technology
Massachusetts Institute of Technology. Computer Science and Artificial Intelligence Laboratory
Massachusetts Institute of Technology. Institute for Medical Engineering & Science
Harvard--MIT Program in Health Sciences and Technology. Laboratory for Computational Physiology
MIT Critical Data (Laboratory)
Cosgriff, Christopher V.
Celi, Leo Anthony G.
Ko, Stephanie
Sundaresan, Tejas
Armengol de la Hoz, Miguel Ángel
Kaufman, Aaron Russell
Stone, David J
Badawi, Omar
Deliberato, Rodrigo
Harvard University--MIT Division of Health Sciences and Technology
Massachusetts Institute of Technology. Computer Science and Artificial Intelligence Laboratory
Massachusetts Institute of Technology. Institute for Medical Engineering & Science
Harvard--MIT Program in Health Sciences and Technology. Laboratory for Computational Physiology
MIT Critical Data (Laboratory)
Cosgriff, Christopher V.
Celi, Leo Anthony G.
Ko, Stephanie
Sundaresan, Tejas
Armengol de la Hoz, Miguel Ángel
Kaufman, Aaron Russell
Stone, David J
Badawi, Omar
Deliberato, Rodrigo
Source :
Nature
Publication Year :
2020

Abstract

Illness severity scores are regularly employed for quality improvement and benchmarking in the intensive care unit, but poor generalization performance, particularly with respect to probability calibration, has limited their use for decision support. These models tend to perform worse in patients at a high risk for mortality. We hypothesized that a sequential modeling approach wherein an initial regression model assigns risk and all patients deemed high risk then have their risk quantified by a second, high-risk-specific, regression model would result in a model with superior calibration across the risk spectrum. We compared this approach to a logistic regression model and a sophisticated machine learning approach, the gradient boosting machine. The sequential approach did not have an effect on the receiver operating characteristic curve or the precision-recall curve but resulted in improved reliability curves. The gradient boosting machine achieved a small improvement in discrimination performance and was similarly calibrated to the sequential models.<br />National Institutes of Health (U.S.) (Grant EB017205)

Details

Database :
OAIster
Journal :
Nature
Notes :
application/pdf
Publication Type :
Electronic Resource
Accession number :
edsoai.on1155491357
Document Type :
Electronic Resource