JMIRx Med (Jun 2024)

Performance Drift in Machine Learning Models for Cardiac Surgery Risk Prediction: Retrospective Analysis

  • Tim Dong,
  • Shubhra Sinha,
  • Ben Zhai,
  • Daniel Fudulu,
  • Jeremy Chan,
  • Pradeep Narayan,
  • Andy Judge,
  • Massimo Caputo,
  • Arnaldo Dimagli,
  • Umberto Benedetto,
  • Gianni D Angelini

DOI
https://doi.org/10.2196/45973
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 5
pp. e45973 – e45973

Abstract

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Abstract BackgroundThe Society of Thoracic Surgeons and European System for Cardiac Operative Risk Evaluation (EuroSCORE) II risk scores are the most commonly used risk prediction models for in-hospital mortality after adult cardiac surgery. However, they are prone to miscalibration over time and poor generalization across data sets; thus, their use remains controversial. Despite increased interest, a gap in understanding the effect of data set drift on the performance of machine learning (ML) over time remains a barrier to its wider use in clinical practice. Data set drift occurs when an ML system underperforms because of a mismatch between the data it was developed from and the data on which it is deployed. ObjectiveIn this study, we analyzed the extent of performance drift using models built on a large UK cardiac surgery database. The objectives were to (1) rank and assess the extent of performance drift in cardiac surgery risk ML models over time and (2) investigate any potential influence of data set drift and variable importance drift on performance drift. MethodsWe conducted a retrospective analysis of prospectively, routinely gathered data on adult patients undergoing cardiac surgery in the United Kingdom between 2012 and 2019. We temporally split the data 70:30 into a training and validation set and a holdout set. Five novel ML mortality prediction models were developed and assessed, along with EuroSCORE II, for relationships between and within variable importance drift, performance drift, and actual data set drift. Performance was assessed using a consensus metric. ResultsA total of 227,087 adults underwent cardiac surgery during the study period, with a mortality rate of 2.76% (n=6258). There was strong evidence of a decrease in overall performance across all models (P ConclusionsAll models show a decrease in at least 3 of the 5 individual metrics. CEM and variable importance drift detection demonstrate the limitation of logistic regression methods used for cardiac surgery risk prediction and the effects of data set drift. Future work will be required to determine the interplay between ML models and whether ensemble models could improve on their respective performance advantages.