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Artificial neural networks improve early outcome prediction and risk classification in out-of-hospital cardiac arrest patients admitted to intensive care
by
Cronberg, Tobias
, Björnsson, Ola
, Lilja, Gisela
, Johnsson, Jesper
, Jakobsson, Andreas
, Andersson, Peder
, Kjaergard, Jesper
, Frigyesi, Attila
, Friberg, Hans
, Hassager, Christian
, Wise, Matt
, Nielsen, Niklas
in
Accuracy
/ Algorithms
/ Ambulance services
/ Anestesi och intensivvård
/ Anesthesiology and Intensive Care
/ Artificial intelligence
/ Artificial neural networks
/ Cardiac arrest
/ Cardiac patients
/ Cardiology and Cardiovascular Disease
/ Cardiopulmonary resuscitation
/ Cerebral performance category
/ Clinical Medicine
/ Coma
/ Comorbidity
/ CPR
/ Critical care
/ Critical Care Medicine
/ Datasets
/ Emergency Medicine
/ Heart attacks
/ Intensive
/ Intensive care
/ Kardiologi och kardiovaskulära sjukdomar
/ Klinisk medicin
/ Machine learning
/ Medical and Health Sciences
/ Medical prognosis
/ Medical research
/ Medicin och hälsovetenskap
/ Medicine
/ Medicine & Public Health
/ Mortality
/ Neural networks
/ Out-of-hospital cardiac arrest
/ Patient outcomes
/ Patients
/ Variables
2020
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Artificial neural networks improve early outcome prediction and risk classification in out-of-hospital cardiac arrest patients admitted to intensive care
by
Cronberg, Tobias
, Björnsson, Ola
, Lilja, Gisela
, Johnsson, Jesper
, Jakobsson, Andreas
, Andersson, Peder
, Kjaergard, Jesper
, Frigyesi, Attila
, Friberg, Hans
, Hassager, Christian
, Wise, Matt
, Nielsen, Niklas
in
Accuracy
/ Algorithms
/ Ambulance services
/ Anestesi och intensivvård
/ Anesthesiology and Intensive Care
/ Artificial intelligence
/ Artificial neural networks
/ Cardiac arrest
/ Cardiac patients
/ Cardiology and Cardiovascular Disease
/ Cardiopulmonary resuscitation
/ Cerebral performance category
/ Clinical Medicine
/ Coma
/ Comorbidity
/ CPR
/ Critical care
/ Critical Care Medicine
/ Datasets
/ Emergency Medicine
/ Heart attacks
/ Intensive
/ Intensive care
/ Kardiologi och kardiovaskulära sjukdomar
/ Klinisk medicin
/ Machine learning
/ Medical and Health Sciences
/ Medical prognosis
/ Medical research
/ Medicin och hälsovetenskap
/ Medicine
/ Medicine & Public Health
/ Mortality
/ Neural networks
/ Out-of-hospital cardiac arrest
/ Patient outcomes
/ Patients
/ Variables
2020
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Artificial neural networks improve early outcome prediction and risk classification in out-of-hospital cardiac arrest patients admitted to intensive care
by
Cronberg, Tobias
, Björnsson, Ola
, Lilja, Gisela
, Johnsson, Jesper
, Jakobsson, Andreas
, Andersson, Peder
, Kjaergard, Jesper
, Frigyesi, Attila
, Friberg, Hans
, Hassager, Christian
, Wise, Matt
, Nielsen, Niklas
in
Accuracy
/ Algorithms
/ Ambulance services
/ Anestesi och intensivvård
/ Anesthesiology and Intensive Care
/ Artificial intelligence
/ Artificial neural networks
/ Cardiac arrest
/ Cardiac patients
/ Cardiology and Cardiovascular Disease
/ Cardiopulmonary resuscitation
/ Cerebral performance category
/ Clinical Medicine
/ Coma
/ Comorbidity
/ CPR
/ Critical care
/ Critical Care Medicine
/ Datasets
/ Emergency Medicine
/ Heart attacks
/ Intensive
/ Intensive care
/ Kardiologi och kardiovaskulära sjukdomar
/ Klinisk medicin
/ Machine learning
/ Medical and Health Sciences
/ Medical prognosis
/ Medical research
/ Medicin och hälsovetenskap
/ Medicine
/ Medicine & Public Health
/ Mortality
/ Neural networks
/ Out-of-hospital cardiac arrest
/ Patient outcomes
/ Patients
/ Variables
2020
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Artificial neural networks improve early outcome prediction and risk classification in out-of-hospital cardiac arrest patients admitted to intensive care
Journal Article
Artificial neural networks improve early outcome prediction and risk classification in out-of-hospital cardiac arrest patients admitted to intensive care
2020
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Overview
Background
Pre-hospital circumstances, cardiac arrest characteristics, comorbidities and clinical status on admission are strongly associated with outcome after out-of-hospital cardiac arrest (OHCA). Early prediction of outcome may inform prognosis, tailor therapy and help in interpreting the intervention effect in heterogenous clinical trials. This study aimed to create a model for early prediction of outcome by artificial neural networks (ANN) and use this model to investigate intervention effects on classes of illness severity in cardiac arrest patients treated with targeted temperature management (TTM).
Methods
Using the cohort of the TTM trial, we performed a post hoc analysis of 932 unconscious patients from 36 centres with OHCA of a presumed cardiac cause. The patient outcome was the functional outcome, including survival at 180 days follow-up using a dichotomised Cerebral Performance Category (CPC) scale with good functional outcome defined as CPC 1–2 and poor functional outcome defined as CPC 3–5. Outcome prediction and severity class assignment were performed using a supervised machine learning model based on ANN.
Results
The outcome was predicted with an area under the receiver operating characteristic curve (AUC) of 0.891 using 54 clinical variables available on admission to hospital, categorised as background, pre-hospital and admission data. Corresponding models using background, pre-hospital or admission variables separately had inferior prediction performance. When comparing the ANN model with a logistic regression-based model on the same cohort, the ANN model performed significantly better (
p
= 0.029). A simplified ANN model showed promising performance with an AUC above 0.852 when using three variables only: age, time to ROSC and first monitored rhythm. The ANN-stratified analyses showed similar intervention effect of TTM to 33 °C or 36 °C in predefined classes with different risk of a poor outcome.
Conclusion
A supervised machine learning model using ANN predicted neurological recovery, including survival excellently, and outperformed a conventional model based on logistic regression. Among the data available at the time of hospitalisation, factors related to the pre-hospital setting carried most information. ANN may be used to stratify a heterogenous trial population in risk classes and help determine intervention effects across subgroups.
Publisher
BioMed Central,BioMed Central Ltd,Springer Nature B.V,BMC
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