4.6 Article

Using Explainable Machine Learning to Improve Intensive Care Unit Alarm Systems

Journal

SENSORS
Volume 21, Issue 21, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/s21217125

Keywords

alarms; explainable machine learning; Intensive Care Unit; machine learning; MIMIC; patient monitoring; sensors

Funding

  1. Axencia Galega de Innovacion (GAIN) through Proxectos de investigacion sobre o SARS-CoV-2 e a enfermidade COVID-19 con cargo ao Fondo COVID-19 program [IN845D-2020/29]

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This paper introduces the use of explainable machine learning techniques for automated analysis of ICU patient data. The results show that the proposed model can effectively predict mortality rates for ICU patients in different age groups, and help improve alarm systems to enhance healthcare personnel's vigilance.
Due to the continuous monitoring process of critical patients, Intensive Care Units (ICU) generate large amounts of data, which are difficult for healthcare personnel to analyze manually, especially in overloaded situations such as those present during the COVID-19 pandemic. Therefore, the automatic analysis of these data has many practical applications in patient monitoring, including the optimization of alarm systems for alerting healthcare personnel. In this paper, explainable machine learning techniques are used for this purpose, with a methodology based on age-stratification, boosting classifiers, and Shapley Additive Explanations (SHAP) proposed. The methodology is evaluated using MIMIC-III, an ICU patient research database. The results show that the proposed model can predict mortality within the ICU with AUROC values of 0.961, 0.936, 0.898, and 0.883 for age groups 18-45, 45-65, 65-85 and 85+, respectively. By using SHAP, the features with the highest impact in predicting mortality for different age groups and the threshold from which the value of a clinical feature has a negative impact on the patient's health can be identified. This allows ICU alarms to be improved by identifying the most important variables to be sensed and the threshold values at which the health personnel must be warned.

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