4.6 Article

Readmission prediction using deep learning on electronic health records

Journal

JOURNAL OF BIOMEDICAL INFORMATICS
Volume 97, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

ACADEMIC PRESS INC ELSEVIER SCIENCE
DOI: 10.1016/j.jbi.2019.103256

Keywords

Electronic health records; Readmission prediction; Long short-term memory networks; Contextual embeddings

Funding

  1. European Regional Development Fund (ERDF), Health Technology Center under the project HiCube -behovsmotiverad halsoinnovation
  2. CAISR at Halmstad University under the project HiCube -behovsmotiverad halsoinnovation
  3. Hallands Hospital under the project HiCube -behovsmotiverad halsoinnovation

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Unscheduled 30-day readmissions are a hallmark of Congestive Heart Failure (CHF) patients that pose significant health risks and escalate care cost. In order to reduce readmissions and curb the cost of care, it is important to initiate targeted intervention programs for patients at risk of readmission. This requires identifying high-risk patients at the time of discharge from hospital. Here, using real data from over 7500 CHF patients hospitalized between 2012 and 2016 in Sweden, we built and tested a deep learning framework to predict 30-day unscheduled readmission. We present a cost-sensitive formulation of Long Short-Term Memory (LSTM) neural network using expert features and contextual embedding of clinical concepts. This study targets key elements of an Electronic Health Record (EHR) driven prediction model in a single framework: using both expert and machine derived features, incorporating sequential patterns and addressing the class imbalance problem. We evaluate the contribution of each element towards prediction performance (ROC-AUC, Fl-measure) and costsavings. We show that the model with all key elements achieves higher discrimination ability (AUC: 0.77; Fl: 0.51; Cost: 22% of maximum possible savings) outperforming the reduced models in at least two evaluation metrics. Additionally, we present a simple financial analysis to estimate annual savings if targeted interventions are offered to high risk patients.

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