Pulmonary Circulation (Apr 2023)
A claims‐based, machine‐learning algorithm to identify patients with pulmonary arterial hypertension
Abstract
Abstract Many patients with pulmonary arterial hypertension (PAH) experience substantial delays in diagnosis, which is associated with worse outcomes and higher costs. Tools for diagnosing PAH sooner may lead to earlier treatment, which may delay disease progression and adverse outcomes including hospitalization and death. We developed a machine‐learning (ML) algorithm to identify patients at risk for PAH earlier in their symptom journey and distinguish them from patients with similar early symptoms not at risk for developing PAH. Our supervised ML model analyzed retrospective, de‐identified data from the US‐based Optum® Clinformatics® Data Mart claims database (January 2015 to December 2019). Propensity score matched PAH and non‐PAH (control) cohorts were established based on observed differences. Random forest models were used to classify patients as PAH or non‐PAH at diagnosis and at 6 months prediagnosis. The PAH and non‐PAH cohorts included 1339 and 4222 patients, respectively. At 6 months prediagnosis, the model performed well in distinguishing PAH and non‐PAH patients, with area under the curve of the receiver operating characteristic of 0.84, recall (sensitivity) of 0.73, and precision of 0.50. Key features distinguishing PAH from non‐PAH cohorts were a longer time between first symptom and the prediagnosis model date (i.e., 6 months before diagnosis); more diagnostic and prescription claims, circulatory claims, and imaging procedures, leading to higher overall healthcare resource utilization; and more hospitalizations. Our model distinguishes between patients with and without PAH at 6 months before diagnosis and illustrates the feasibility of using routine claims data to identify patients at a population level who might benefit from PAH‐specific screening and/or earlier specialist referral.
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