Causal fairness assessment of treatment allocation with electronic health records

IF 4 2区 医学 Q2 COMPUTER SCIENCE, INTERDISCIPLINARY APPLICATIONS Journal of Biomedical Informatics Pub Date : 2024-05-21 DOI:10.1016/j.jbi.2024.104656
Linying Zhang , Lauren R. Richter , Yixin Wang , Anna Ostropolets , Noémie Elhadad , David M. Blei , George Hripcsak
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Abstract

Objective:

Healthcare continues to grapple with the persistent issue of treatment disparities, sparking concerns regarding the equitable allocation of treatments in clinical practice. While various fairness metrics have emerged to assess fairness in decision-making processes, a growing focus has been on causality-based fairness concepts due to their capacity to mitigate confounding effects and reason about bias. However, the application of causal fairness notions in evaluating the fairness of clinical decision-making with electronic health record (EHR) data remains an understudied domain. This study aims to address the methodological gap in assessing causal fairness of treatment allocation with electronic health records data. In addition, we investigate the impact of social determinants of health on the assessment of causal fairness of treatment allocation.

Methods:

We propose a causal fairness algorithm to assess fairness in clinical decision-making. Our algorithm accounts for the heterogeneity of patient populations and identifies potential unfairness in treatment allocation by conditioning on patients who have the same likelihood to benefit from the treatment. We apply this framework to a patient cohort with coronary artery disease derived from an EHR database to evaluate the fairness of treatment decisions.

Results:

Our analysis reveals notable disparities in coronary artery bypass grafting (CABG) allocation among different patient groups. Women were found to be 4.4%–7.7% less likely to receive CABG than men in two out of four treatment response strata. Similarly, Black or African American patients were 5.4%–8.7% less likely to receive CABG than others in three out of four response strata. These results were similar when social determinants of health (insurance and area deprivation index) were dropped from the algorithm. These findings highlight the presence of disparities in treatment allocation among similar patients, suggesting potential unfairness in the clinical decision-making process.

Conclusion:

This study introduces a novel approach for assessing the fairness of treatment allocation in healthcare. By incorporating responses to treatment into fairness framework, our method explores the potential of quantifying fairness from a causal perspective using EHR data. Our research advances the methodological development of fairness assessment in healthcare and highlight the importance of causality in determining treatment fairness.

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利用电子健康记录对治疗分配进行因果公平性评估。
目的:医疗保健领域一直存在治疗差异问题,这引发了人们对临床实践中治疗公平分配的关注。虽然出现了各种公平性指标来评估决策过程中的公平性,但基于因果关系的公平性概念因其能够减轻混杂效应和推理偏差而日益受到关注。然而,在利用电子健康记录(EHR)数据评估临床决策公平性时,因果关系公平性概念的应用仍是一个研究不足的领域。本研究旨在解决利用电子健康记录数据评估治疗分配因果公平性的方法学空白。此外,我们还研究了健康的社会决定因素对治疗分配因果公平性评估的影响:我们提出了一种因果公平性算法来评估临床决策的公平性。我们的算法考虑到了患者群体的异质性,并通过对从治疗中获益的可能性相同的患者设定条件来识别治疗分配中可能存在的不公平现象。我们将这一框架应用于来自电子病历数据库的冠心病患者队列,以评估治疗决策的公平性:结果:我们的分析表明,冠状动脉旁路移植术(CABG)在不同患者群体中的分配存在明显差异。在四个治疗反应层中的两个层中,女性接受 CABG 的可能性比男性低 4.4%-7.7%。同样,在四个响应分层中的三个中,黑人或非裔美国人患者接受 CABG 的可能性比其他人低 5.4%-8.7%。如果将健康的社会决定因素(保险和地区贫困指数)从算法中剔除,这些结果也是相似的。这些发现凸显了类似患者在治疗分配上的差异,表明临床决策过程中可能存在不公平现象:本研究引入了一种新方法来评估医疗保健中治疗分配的公平性。通过将对治疗的反应纳入公平性框架,我们的方法探索了利用电子病历数据从因果角度量化公平性的潜力。我们的研究推动了医疗公平性评估方法的发展,并强调了因果关系在确定治疗公平性中的重要性。
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来源期刊
Journal of Biomedical Informatics
Journal of Biomedical Informatics 医学-计算机:跨学科应用
CiteScore
8.90
自引率
6.70%
发文量
243
审稿时长
32 days
期刊介绍: The Journal of Biomedical Informatics reflects a commitment to high-quality original research papers, reviews, and commentaries in the area of biomedical informatics methodology. Although we publish articles motivated by applications in the biomedical sciences (for example, clinical medicine, health care, population health, and translational bioinformatics), the journal emphasizes reports of new methodologies and techniques that have general applicability and that form the basis for the evolving science of biomedical informatics. Articles on medical devices; evaluations of implemented systems (including clinical trials of information technologies); or papers that provide insight into a biological process, a specific disease, or treatment options would generally be more suitable for publication in other venues. Papers on applications of signal processing and image analysis are often more suitable for biomedical engineering journals or other informatics journals, although we do publish papers that emphasize the information management and knowledge representation/modeling issues that arise in the storage and use of biological signals and images. System descriptions are welcome if they illustrate and substantiate the underlying methodology that is the principal focus of the report and an effort is made to address the generalizability and/or range of application of that methodology. Note also that, given the international nature of JBI, papers that deal with specific languages other than English, or with country-specific health systems or approaches, are acceptable for JBI only if they offer generalizable lessons that are relevant to the broad JBI readership, regardless of their country, language, culture, or health system.
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