Frontiers in Artificial Intelligence (Jan 2024)

Predicting disease onset from electronic health records for population health management: a scalable and explainable Deep Learning approach

  • Robert Grout,
  • Rishab Gupta,
  • Ruby Bryant,
  • Mawada A. Elmahgoub,
  • Yijie Li,
  • Khushbakht Irfanullah,
  • Rahul F. Patel,
  • Jake Fawkes,
  • Catherine Inness

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3389/frai.2023.1287541
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 6

Abstract

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IntroductionThe move from a reactive model of care which treats conditions when they arise to a proactive model which intervenes early to prevent adverse healthcare events will benefit from advances in the predictive capabilities of Artificial Intelligence and Machine Learning. This paper investigates the ability of a Deep Learning (DL) approach to predict future disease diagnosis from Electronic Health Records (EHR) for the purposes of Population Health Management.MethodsIn this study, embeddings were created using a Word2Vec algorithm from structured vocabulary commonly used in EHRs e.g., Systematized Nomenclature of Medicine Clinical Terms (SNOMED CT) codes. This study is based on longitudinal medical data from ~50 m patients in the USA. We introduced a novel method of including binned observation values into an embeddings model. We also included novel features associated with wider determinants of health. Patient records comprising these embeddings were then fed to a Bidirectional Gated Recurrent Unit (GRU) model to predict the likelihood of patients developing Type 2 Diabetes Mellitus, Chronic Obstructive Pulmonary Disorder (COPD), Hypertension or experiencing an Acute Myocardial Infarction (MI) in the next 3 years. SHapley Additive exPlanations (SHAP) values were calculated to achieve model explainability.ResultsIncreasing the data scope to include binned observations and wider determinants of health was found to improve predictive performance. We achieved an area under the Receiver Operating Characteristic curve value of 0.92 for Diabetes prediction, 0.94 for COPD, 0.92 for Hypertension and 0.94 for MI. The SHAP values showed that the models had learned features known to be associated with these outcomes.DiscussionThe DL approach outlined in this study can identify clinically-relevant features from large-scale EHR data and use these to predict future disease outcomes. This study highlights the promise of DL solutions for identifying patients at future risk of disease and providing clinicians with the means to understand and evaluate the drivers of those predictions.

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