Published July 31, 2019 | Version v1
Journal article Open

Combining patient visual timelines with deep learning to predict mortality

  • 1. University of Chicago
  • 2. Lurie Children's Hospital of Chicago

Description

Background: Deep learning algorithms have achieved human-equivalent performance in image recognition. However, the majority of clinical data within electronic health records is inherently in a non-image format. Therefore, creating visual representations of clinical data could facilitate using cutting-edge deep learning models for predicting outcomes such as in-hospital mortality, while enabling clinician interpretability. The objective of this study was to develop a framework that first transforms longitudinal patient data into visual timelines and then utilizes deep learning to predict in-hospital mortality.

Methods and findings: All adult consecutive patient admissions from 2008–2016 at a tertiary care center were included in this retrospective study. Two-dimensional visual representations for each patient were created with clinical variables on one dimension and time on the other. Predictors included vital signs, laboratory results, medications, interventions, nurse examinations, and diagnostic tests collected over the first 48 hours of the hospital stay. These visual timelines were utilized by a convolutional neural network with a recurrent layer model to predict in-hospital mortality. Seventy percent of the cohort was used for model derivation and 30% for independent validation. Of 115,825 hospital admissions, 2,926 (2.5%) suffered in-hospital mortality. Our model predicted in-hospital mortality significantly better than the Modified Early Warning Score (area under the receiver operating characteristic curve [AUC]: 0.91 vs. 0.76, P < 0.001) and the Sequential Organ Failure Assessment score (AUC: 0.91 vs. 0.57, P < 0.001) in the independent validation set. Class-activation heatmaps were utilized to highlight areas of the picture that were most important for making the prediction, thereby providing clinicians with insight into each individual patient's prediction.

Conclusions: We converted longitudinal patient data into visual timelines and applied a deep neural network for predicting in-hospital mortality more accurately than current standard clinical models, while allowing for interpretation. Our framework holds promise for predicting several important outcomes in clinical medicine.

Data availability

Since the data is high granular in nature and contains potentially sensitive patient information, public sharing of the data would breach the University of Chicago’s IRB protocol requirements. Interested researchers may contact Mary Akel, University of Chicago, via email at makel@medicine.bsd.uchicago.edu for data access requests.

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Additional details

Identifiers

DOI
10.1371/journal.pone.0220640
Other
oai:uchicago.tind.io:6284

Funding

National Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute
career development award
National Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute
career development award
National Institute of General Medicine Sciences
R01 award

UChicago Information

Division(s)
Biological Sciences Division
Department(s)
Medicine, Pediatrics