BMJ Health & Care Informatics (Jul 2020)

Effect of a sepsis prediction algorithm on patient mortality, length of stay and readmission: a prospective multicentre clinical outcomes evaluation of real-world patient data from US hospitals

  • Jonathan Roberts,
  • Andrea Mccoy,
  • Hoyt Burdick,
  • Eduardo Pino,
  • Denise Gabel-Comeau,
  • Carol Gu,
  • Sidney Le,
  • Joseph Slote,
  • Emily Pellegrini,
  • Abigail Green-Saxena,
  • Jana Hoffman,
  • Ritankar Das

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1136/bmjhci-2019-100109
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 27, no. 1

Abstract

Read online

Background Severe sepsis and septic shock are among the leading causes of death in the USA. While early prediction of severe sepsis can reduce adverse patient outcomes, sepsis remains one of the most expensive conditions to diagnose and treat.Objective The purpose of this study was to evaluate the effect of a machine learning algorithm for severe sepsis prediction on in-hospital mortality, hospital length of stay and 30-day readmission.Design Prospective clinical outcomes evaluation.Setting Evaluation was performed on a multiyear, multicentre clinical data set of real-world data containing 75 147 patient encounters from nine hospitals across the continental USA, ranging from community hospitals to large academic medical centres.Participants Analyses were performed for 17 758 adult patients who met two or more systemic inflammatory response syndrome criteria at any point during their stay (‘sepsis-related’ patients).Interventions Machine learning algorithm for severe sepsis prediction.Outcome measures In-hospital mortality, length of stay and 30-day readmission rates.Results Hospitals saw an average 39.5% reduction of in-hospital mortality, a 32.3% reduction in hospital length of stay and a 22.7% reduction in 30-day readmission rate for sepsis-related patient stays when using the machine learning algorithm in clinical outcomes analysis.Conclusions Reductions of in-hospital mortality, hospital length of stay and 30-day readmissions were observed in real-world clinical use of the machine learning-based algorithm. The predictive algorithm may be successfully used to improve sepsis-related outcomes in live clinical settings.Trial registration number NCT03960203