Journal of Clinical Medicine (Mar 2024)

Predicting the Length of Mechanical Ventilation in Acute Respiratory Disease Syndrome Using Machine Learning: The PIONEER Study

  • Jesús Villar,
  • Jesús M. González-Martín,
  • Cristina Fernández,
  • Juan A. Soler,
  • Alfonso Ambrós,
  • Lidia Pita-García,
  • Lorena Fernández,
  • Carlos Ferrando,
  • Blanca Arocas,
  • Myriam González-Vaquero,
  • José M. Añón,
  • Elena González-Higueras,
  • Dácil Parrilla,
  • Anxela Vidal,
  • M. Mar Fernández,
  • Pedro Rodríguez-Suárez,
  • Rosa L. Fernández,
  • Estrella Gómez-Bentolila,
  • Karen E. A. Burns,
  • Tamas Szakmany,
  • Ewout W. Steyerberg,
  • the PredictION of Duration of mEchanical vEntilation in ARDS (PIONEER) Network

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/jcm13061811
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 13, no. 6
p. 1811

Abstract

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Background: The ability to predict a long duration of mechanical ventilation (MV) by clinicians is very limited. We assessed the value of machine learning (ML) for early prediction of the duration of MV > 14 days in patients with moderate-to-severe acute respiratory distress syndrome (ARDS). Methods: This is a development, testing, and external validation study using data from 1173 patients on MV ≥ 3 days with moderate-to-severe ARDS. We first developed and tested prediction models in 920 ARDS patients using relevant features captured at the time of moderate/severe ARDS diagnosis, at 24 h and 72 h after diagnosis with logistic regression, and Multilayer Perceptron, Support Vector Machine, and Random Forest ML techniques. For external validation, we used an independent cohort of 253 patients on MV ≥ 3 days with moderate/severe ARDS. Results: A total of 441 patients (48%) from the derivation cohort (n = 920) and 100 patients (40%) from the validation cohort (n = 253) were mechanically ventilated for >14 days [median 14 days (IQR 8–25) vs. 13 days (IQR 7–21), respectively]. The best early prediction model was obtained with data collected at 72 h after moderate/severe ARDS diagnosis. Multilayer Perceptron risk modeling identified major prognostic factors for the duration of MV > 14 days, including PaO2/FiO2, PaCO2, pH, and positive end-expiratory pressure. Predictions of the duration of MV > 14 days showed modest discrimination [AUC 0.71 (95%CI 0.65–0.76)]. Conclusions: Prolonged MV duration in moderate/severe ARDS patients remains difficult to predict early even with ML techniques such as Multilayer Perceptron and using data at 72 h of diagnosis. More research is needed to identify markers for predicting the length of MV. This study was registered on 14 August 2023 at ClinicalTrials.gov (NCT NCT05993377).

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