4.7 Article

Risk prediction in surgery using case-based reasoning and agent-based modelization

Journal

COMPUTERS IN BIOLOGY AND MEDICINE
Volume 128, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

PERGAMON-ELSEVIER SCIENCE LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.compbiomed.2020.104040

Keywords

Case-based reasoning; Multi-agent system; Simulation; Risk prediction; Adverse events in surgery

Funding

  1. European Regional Development Fund [UFC SACD/920/2303/MASSAI-OPE-2019-109]

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This paper introduces an architecture that combines a Multi-Agent System with Case-Based Reasoning to manage risks in an operating room during surgical procedures. By simulating various situations and analyzing data, the system can determine alert thresholds that are not predefined and shows that the proposed thresholds are more efficient.
Managing the risks arising from the actions and conditions of the various elements that make up an operating room is a major concern during a surgical procedure. One of the main challenges is to define alert thresholds in a non-deterministic context where unpredictable adverse events occur. In response to this problematic, this paper presents an architecture that couples a Multi-Agent System (MAS) with Case-Based Reasoning (CBR). The possibility of emulating a large number of situations thanks to MAS, combined with analytical data management thanks to CBR, is an original and efficient way of determining thresholds that are not defined a priori. We also compared different similarity calculation methods (Retrieve phase of CBR). The results presented in this article show that our model can manage alert thresholds in an environment that manages data as disparate as infectious agents, patient's vitals and human fatigue. In addition, they reveal that the thresholds proposed by the system are more efficient than the predefined ones. These results tend to prove that our simulator is an effective alert generator. Nevertheless, the context remains a simulation mode that we would like to enrich with real data from, for example, monitoring sensors (bracelet for human fatigue, monitoring, etc).

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