4.5 Article

Machine learning can reliably identify patients at risk of overnight hospital admission following anterior cruciate ligament reconstruction

期刊

KNEE SURGERY SPORTS TRAUMATOLOGY ARTHROSCOPY
卷 29, 期 9, 页码 2958-2966

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SPRINGER
DOI: 10.1007/s00167-020-06321-w

关键词

Anterior cruciate ligament; Machine learning; ACL; ACL reconstruction

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This study aimed to develop and validate a machine learning algorithm to effectively identify patients requiring admission following ACL reconstruction. Important factors such as operative time, anesthesia type, age, gender, and BMI were identified to predict the need for overnight admission. The ensemble model showed the best performance in internal validation and could potentially guide preoperative screening and risk stratification for overnight admission following ACL reconstruction.
Purpose Overnight admission following anterior cruciate ligament reconstruction has implications on clinical outcomes as well as cost benefit, yet there are few validated risk calculators for reliable identification of appropriate candidates. The purpose of this study is to develop and validate a machine learning algorithm that can effectively identify patients requiring admission following elective anterior cruciate ligament (ACL) reconstruction. Methods A retrospective review of a national surgical outcomes database was performed to identify patients who underwent elective ACL reconstruction from 2006 to 2018. Patients admitted overnight postoperatively were identified as those with length of stay of 1 or more days. Models were generated using random forest (RF), extreme gradient boosting (XGBoost), linear discriminant classifier (LDA), and adaptive boosting algorithms (AdaBoost), and an additional model was produced as a weighted ensemble of the four final algorithms. Results Overall, of the 4,709 patients included, 531 patients (11.3%) required at least one overnight stay following ACL reconstruction. The factors determined most important for identification of candidates for inpatient admission were operative time, anesthesia type, age, gender, and BMI. Smoking history, history of COPD, and history of coagulopathy were identified as less important variables. The following factors supported overnight admission: operative time > 200 min, age < 35.8 or > 53.5 years, male gender, BMI < 25 or > 31.2 kg/m(2), positive smoking history, history of COPD and the presence of preoperative coagulopathy. The ensemble model achieved the best performance based on discrimination assessed via internal validation (AUC = 0.76), calibration, and decision curve analysis. The model was integrated into a web-based open-access application able to provide both predictions and explanations. Conclusion Modifiable risk factors identified by the model such as increased BMI, operative time, anesthesia type, and comorbidities can help clinicians optimize preoperative status to prevent costs associated with unnecessary admissions. If externally validated in independent populations, this algorithm could use these inputs to guide preoperative screening and risk stratification to identify patients requiring overnight admission for observation following ACL reconstruction.

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