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- Title
Short-term vital parameter forecasting in the intensive care unit: A benchmark study leveraging data from patients after cardiothoracic surgery.
- Authors
Hinrichs, Nils; Roeschl, Tobias; Lanmueller, Pia; Balzer, Felix; Eickhoff, Carsten; O'Brien, Benjamin; Falk, Volkmar; Meyer, Alexander
- Abstract
Patients in an Intensive Care Unit (ICU) are closely and continuously monitored, and many machine learning (ML) solutions have been proposed to predict specific outcomes like death, bleeding, or organ failure. Forecasting of vital parameters is a more general approach to ML-based patient monitoring, but the literature on its feasibility and robust benchmarks of achievable accuracy are scarce. We implemented five univariate statistical models (the naïve model, the Theta method, exponential smoothing, the autoregressive integrated moving average model, and an autoregressive single-layer neural network), two univariate neural networks (N-BEATS and N-HiTS), and two multivariate neural networks designed for sequential data (a recurrent neural network with gated recurrent unit, GRU, and a Transformer network) to produce forecasts for six vital parameters recorded at five-minute intervals during intensive care monitoring. Vital parameters were the diastolic, systolic, and mean arterial blood pressure, central venous pressure, peripheral oxygen saturation (measured by non-invasive pulse oximetry) and heart rate, and forecasts were made for 5 through 120 minutes into the future. Patients used in this study recovered from cardiothoracic surgery in an ICU. The patient cohort used for model development (n = 22,348) and internal testing (n = 2,483) originated from a heart center in Germany, while a patient sub-set from the eICU collaborative research database, an American multicenter ICU cohort, was used for external testing (n = 7,477). The GRU was the predominant method in this study. Uni- and multivariate neural network models proved to be superior to univariate statistical models across vital parameters and forecast horizons, and their advantage steadily became more pronounced for increasing forecast horizons. With this study, we established an extensive set of benchmarks for forecast performance in the ICU. Our findings suggest that supplying physicians with short-term forecasts of vital parameters in the ICU is feasible, and that multivariate neural networks are most suited for the task due to their ability to learn patterns across thousands of patients. Author summary: The current health status of patients in an Intensive Care Unit (ICU) is continuously tracked through multiple vital parameters, and physicians use these markers to immediately detect life-threatening derangements and for treatment decision-making. Knowledge about future vital parameter values could lead to the anticipation and timely initiation of potentially life-saving interventions. We therefore sought to test how reliably vital parameters of patients in an ICU could be forecast. Vital parameters of interest were blood pressure (diastolic, systolic, and mean), central venous pressure, peripheral oxygen saturation, and heart rate. Our study cohort consisted of patients recovering from cardiothoracic surgery in one German and multiple American ICUs. Using patient data from roughly 22,000 ICU admissions, we developed nine forecast models, ranging in complexity from very simple to highly sophisticated and tested their performance on roughly 10,000 additional ICU admissions by making them forecast values for all six vital parameters over the next two hours. We thus generated an extensive collection of benchmarks for forecast accuracy in the ICU for future researchers to compare against. We found that, compared to simple statistical methods, sophisticated techniques capable of learning patterns from thousands of ICU stays are slightly better at forecasting the immediate next value, and much better when it comes to forecasting further ahead into the future.
- Subjects
VITAL signs; OXYGEN saturation; PULSE oximetry; DEATH; INTERPROFESSIONAL relations; THORACIC surgery; DIGITAL health; MULTIPLE organ failure; MULTIVARIATE analysis; DECISION making; DESCRIPTIVE statistics; SURGICAL complications; ARTERIAL pressure; HEART beat; LONGITUDINAL method; INTENSIVE care units; STATISTICS; ARTIFICIAL neural networks; DIASTOLIC blood pressure; CENTRAL venous pressure; RESEARCH; PATIENT monitoring; MACHINE learning; SYSTOLIC blood pressure; CONFIDENCE intervals; CARDIAC surgery; HEMORRHAGE; FORECASTING
- Publication
PLoS Digital Health, 2024, Vol 3, Issue 9, p1
- ISSN
2767-3170
- Publication type
Article
- DOI
10.1371/journal.pdig.0000598