4.6 Article

Personalized and automated remote monitoring of atrial fibrillation

Journal

EUROPACE
Volume 18, Issue 3, Pages 347-352

Publisher

OXFORD UNIV PRESS
DOI: 10.1093/europace/euv234

Keywords

Cardiac implantable electronic devices; Remote monitoring; Atrial fibrillation; Decision support systems; Artificial intelligence

Funding

  1. Agence Nationale Pour la Recherche - Technologies pour la Sante [ANR-07-TecSan-001]

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Aims Remote monitoring of cardiac implantable electronic devices is a growing standard; yet, remote follow-up and management of alerts represents a time-consuming task for physicians or trained staff. This study evaluates an automatic mechanism based on artificial intelligence tools to filter atrial fibrillation (AF) alerts based on their medical significance. Methods and results We evaluated this method on alerts for AF episodes that occurred in 60 pacemaker recipients. AKENATON prototype workflow includes two steps: natural language-processing algorithms abstract the patient health record to a digital version, then a knowledge-based algorithm based on an applied formal ontology allows to calculate the CHA(2)DS(2)-VASc score and evaluate the anticoagulation status of the patient. Each alert is then automatically classified by importance from low to critical, by mimicking medical reasoning. Final classification was compared with human expert analysis by two physicians. A total of 1783 alerts about AF episode > 5 min in 60 patients were processed. A 1749 of 1783 alerts (98%) were adequately classified and there were no underestimation of alert importance in the remaining 34 misclassified alerts. Conclusion This work demonstrates the ability of a pilot system to classify alerts and improves personalized remote monitoring of patients. In particular, our method allows integration of patient medical history with device alert notifications, which is useful both from medical and resource-management perspectives. The system was able to automatically classify the importance of 1783 AF alerts in 60 patients, which resulted in an 84% reduction in notification workload, while preserving patient safety.

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