利用机器学习从患者报告的结果指标预测计划外住院费用和化疗管理。

IF 3.3 Q2 ONCOLOGY JCO Clinical Cancer Informatics Pub Date : 2024-04-01 DOI:10.1200/CCI.23.00264
Zuzanna Wójcik, Vania Dimitrova, Lorraine Warrington, Galina Velikova, Kate Absolom
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引用次数: 0

摘要

目的:化疗的不良反应往往需要入院治疗或治疗管理。识别导致非计划住院的因素可提高医疗质量和患者的福利。本研究旨在评估患者报告的结果测量(PROMs)是否能提高机器学习(ML)模型预测入院、分流事件(联系帮助热线或到医院就诊)和化疗改变的性能:使用的临床试验数据包含对三种PROMs(欧洲癌症研究和治疗组织核心生活质量问卷[QLQ-C30]、EuroQol五维视觉模拟量表[EQ-5D]和癌症治疗功能评估总表[FACT-G])的回答以及508名接受化疗者的临床信息。六个特征集(包含以下变量:[1] 所有可用变量;[2] 临床变量;[3] PROMs;[4] 临床变量和 QLQ-C30;[5] 临床变量和 EQ-5D;[6] 临床变量和 FACT-G)应用于六个 ML 模型(逻辑回归[LR]、决策树、自适应提升、随机森林[RF]、支持向量机[SVMs]和神经网络),以预测入院、分诊事件和化疗变化:通过对六种 ML 模型在每种特征集上的预测性能进行综合分析,并采用三种不同的方法来处理类别不平衡,结果表明 PROMs 提高了对所有结果的预测。在平衡数据集中,RF 和 SVM 预测入院和化疗变化的性能最高,而在不平衡数据集中,LR 预测入院和化疗变化的性能最高。与不平衡数据集或仅有平衡训练集的数据集相比,平衡数据的性能最佳:这些结果证实了一种观点,即可以将 ML 应用于 PROM 数据,以预测医院使用情况和化疗管理。如果进一步探索,这项研究可能有助于医疗保健规划和个性化治疗。对不同不平衡数据处理方法所影响的模型性能进行严格比较,显示了 ML 研究的最佳实践。
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Using Machine Learning to Predict Unplanned Hospital Utilization and Chemotherapy Management From Patient-Reported Outcome Measures.

Purpose: Adverse effects of chemotherapy often require hospital admissions or treatment management. Identifying factors contributing to unplanned hospital utilization may improve health care quality and patients' well-being. This study aimed to assess if patient-reported outcome measures (PROMs) improve performance of machine learning (ML) models predicting hospital admissions, triage events (contacting helpline or attending hospital), and changes to chemotherapy.

Materials and methods: Clinical trial data were used and contained responses to three PROMs (European Organisation for Research and Treatment of Cancer Core Quality of Life Questionnaire [QLQ-C30], EuroQol Five-Dimensional Visual Analogue Scale [EQ-5D], and Functional Assessment of Cancer Therapy-General [FACT-G]) and clinical information on 508 participants undergoing chemotherapy. Six feature sets (with following variables: [1] all available; [2] clinical; [3] PROMs; [4] clinical and QLQ-C30; [5] clinical and EQ-5D; [6] clinical and FACT-G) were applied in six ML models (logistic regression [LR], decision tree, adaptive boosting, random forest [RF], support vector machines [SVMs], and neural network) to predict admissions, triage events, and chemotherapy changes.

Results: The comprehensive analysis of predictive performances of the six ML models for each feature set in three different methods for handling class imbalance indicated that PROMs improved predictions of all outcomes. RF and SVMs had the highest performance for predicting admissions and changes to chemotherapy in balanced data sets, and LR in imbalanced data set. Balancing data led to the best performance compared with imbalanced data set or data set with balanced train set only.

Conclusion: These results endorsed the view that ML can be applied on PROM data to predict hospital utilization and chemotherapy management. If further explored, this study may contribute to health care planning and treatment personalization. Rigorous comparison of model performance affected by different imbalanced data handling methods shows best practice in ML research.

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190
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