Frontiers in Physiology (Mar 2021)

Prediction of Mortality in Hemodialysis Patients Using Moving Multivariate Distance

  • Mingxin Liu,
  • Véronique Legault,
  • Tamàs Fülöp,
  • Tamàs Fülöp,
  • Anne-Marie Côté,
  • Anne-Marie Côté,
  • Dominique Gravel,
  • F. Guillaume Blanchet,
  • F. Guillaume Blanchet,
  • F. Guillaume Blanchet,
  • Diana L. Leung,
  • Sylvia Juhong Lee,
  • Yuichi Nakazato,
  • Alan A. Cohen

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3389/fphys.2021.612494
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 12

Abstract

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There is an increasingly widespread use of biomarkers in network physiology to evaluate an organism’s physiological state. A recent study showed that albumin variability increases before death in chronic hemodialysis patients. We hypothesized that a multivariate statistical approach would better allow us to capture signals of impending physiological collapse/death. We proposed a Moving Multivariate Distance (MMD), based on the Mahalanobis distance, to quantify the variability of the multivariate biomarker profile as a whole from one visit to the next. Biomarker profiles from a visit were used as the reference to calculate MMD at the subsequent visit. We selected 16 biomarkers (of which 11 are measured every 2 weeks) from blood samples of 763 chronic kidney disease patients hemodialyzed at the CHUS hospital in Quebec, who visited the hospital regularly (∼every 2 weeks) to perform routine blood tests. MMD tended to increase markedly preceding death, indicating an increasing intraindividual multivariate variability presaging a critical transition. In survival analysis, the hazard ratio between the 97.5th percentile and the 2.5th percentile of MMD reached as high as 21.1 [95% CI: 14.3, 31.2], showing that higher variability indicates substantially higher mortality risk. Multivariate approaches to early warning signs of critical transitions hold substantial clinical promise to identify early signs of critical transitions, such as risk of death in hemodialysis patients; future work should also explore whether the MMD approach works in other complex systems (i.e., ecosystems, economies), and should compare it to other multivariate approaches to quantify system variability.

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