Frontiers in Neurology (Mar 2023)

Clustering and prediction of long-term functional recovery patterns in first-time stroke patients

  • Seyoung Shin,
  • Won Hyuk Chang,
  • Deog Young Kim,
  • Jongmin Lee,
  • Min Kyun Sohn,
  • Min-Keun Song,
  • Yong-Il Shin,
  • Yang-Soo Lee,
  • Min Cheol Joo,
  • So Young Lee,
  • Junhee Han,
  • Jeonghoon Ahn,
  • Gyung-Jae Oh,
  • Young-Taek Kim,
  • Kwangsu Kim,
  • Yun-Hee Kim,
  • Yun-Hee Kim

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3389/fneur.2023.1130236
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 14

Abstract

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ObjectivesThe purpose of this study was to cluster long-term multifaceted functional recovery patterns and to establish prediction models for functional outcome in first-time stroke patients using unsupervised machine learning.MethodsThis study is an interim analysis of the dataset from the Korean Stroke Cohort for Functioning and Rehabilitation (KOSCO), a long-term, prospective, multicenter cohort study of first-time stroke patients. The KOSCO screened 10,636 first-time stroke patients admitted to nine representative hospitals in Korea during a three-year recruitment period, and 7,858 patients agreed to enroll. Early clinical and demographic features of stroke patients and six multifaceted functional assessment scores measured from 7 days to 24 months after stroke onset were used as input variables. K-means clustering analysis was performed, and prediction models were generated and validated using machine learning.ResultsA total of 5,534 stroke patients (4,388 ischemic and 1,146 hemorrhagic; mean age 63·31 ± 12·86; 3,253 [58.78%] male) completed functional assessments 24 months after stroke onset. Through K-means clustering, ischemic stroke (IS) patients were clustered into five groups and hemorrhagic stroke (HS) patients into four groups. Each cluster had distinct clinical characteristics and functional recovery patterns. The final prediction models for IS and HS patients achieved relatively high prediction accuracies of 0.926 and 0.887, respectively.ConclusionsThe longitudinal, multi-dimensional, functional assessment data of first-time stroke patients were successfully clustered, and the prediction models showed relatively good accuracies. Early identification and prediction of long-term functional outcomes will help clinicians develop customized treatment strategies.

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