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Predicting the causative pathogen among children with pneumonia using a causal Bayesian network

BACKGROUND: Pneumonia remains a leading cause of hospitalization and death among young children worldwide, and the diagnostic challenge of differentiating bacterial from non-bacterial pneumonia is the main driver of antibiotic use for treating pneumonia in children. Causal Bayesian networks (BNs) se...

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Autores principales: Wu, Yue, Mascaro, Steven, Bhuiyan, Mejbah, Fathima, Parveen, Mace, Ariel O., Nicol, Mark P., Richmond, Peter C., Kirkham, Lea-Ann, Dymock, Michael, Foley, David A., McLeod, Charlie, Borland, Meredith L., Martin, Andrew, Williams, Phoebe C. M., Marsh, Julie A., Snelling, Thomas L., Blyth, Christopher C.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2023
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10035934/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/36913404
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pcbi.1010967
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author Wu, Yue
Mascaro, Steven
Bhuiyan, Mejbah
Fathima, Parveen
Mace, Ariel O.
Nicol, Mark P.
Richmond, Peter C.
Kirkham, Lea-Ann
Dymock, Michael
Foley, David A.
McLeod, Charlie
Borland, Meredith L.
Martin, Andrew
Williams, Phoebe C. M.
Marsh, Julie A.
Snelling, Thomas L.
Blyth, Christopher C.
author_facet Wu, Yue
Mascaro, Steven
Bhuiyan, Mejbah
Fathima, Parveen
Mace, Ariel O.
Nicol, Mark P.
Richmond, Peter C.
Kirkham, Lea-Ann
Dymock, Michael
Foley, David A.
McLeod, Charlie
Borland, Meredith L.
Martin, Andrew
Williams, Phoebe C. M.
Marsh, Julie A.
Snelling, Thomas L.
Blyth, Christopher C.
author_sort Wu, Yue
collection PubMed
description BACKGROUND: Pneumonia remains a leading cause of hospitalization and death among young children worldwide, and the diagnostic challenge of differentiating bacterial from non-bacterial pneumonia is the main driver of antibiotic use for treating pneumonia in children. Causal Bayesian networks (BNs) serve as powerful tools for this problem as they provide clear maps of probabilistic relationships between variables and produce results in an explainable way by incorporating both domain expert knowledge and numerical data. METHODS: We used domain expert knowledge and data in combination and iteratively, to construct, parameterise and validate a causal BN to predict causative pathogens for childhood pneumonia. Expert knowledge elicitation occurred through a series of group workshops, surveys and one-on-one meetings involving 6-8 experts from diverse domain areas. The model performance was evaluated based on both quantitative metrics and qualitative expert validation. Sensitivity analyses were conducted to investigate how the target output is influenced by varying key assumptions of a particularly high degree of uncertainty around data or domain expert knowledge. RESULTS: Designed to apply to a cohort of children with X-ray confirmed pneumonia who presented to a tertiary paediatric hospital in Australia, the resulting BN offers explainable and quantitative predictions on a range of variables of interest, including the diagnosis of bacterial pneumonia, detection of respiratory pathogens in the nasopharynx, and the clinical phenotype of a pneumonia episode. Satisfactory numeric performance has been achieved including an area under the receiver operating characteristic curve of 0.8 in predicting clinically-confirmed bacterial pneumonia with sensitivity 88% and specificity 66% given certain input scenarios (i.e., information that is available and entered into the model) and trade-off preferences (i.e., relative weightings of the consequences of false positive versus false negative predictions). We specifically highlight that a desirable model output threshold for practical use is very dependent upon different input scenarios and trade-off preferences. Three commonly encountered scenarios were presented to demonstrate the potential usefulness of the BN outputs in various clinical pictures. CONCLUSIONS: To our knowledge, this is the first causal model developed to help determine the causative pathogen for paediatric pneumonia. We have shown how the method works and how it would help decision making on the use of antibiotics, providing insight into how computational model predictions may be translated to actionable decisions in practice. We discussed key next steps including external validation, adaptation and implementation. Our model framework and the methodological approach can be adapted beyond our context to broad respiratory infections and geographical and healthcare settings.
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spelling pubmed-100359342023-03-24 Predicting the causative pathogen among children with pneumonia using a causal Bayesian network Wu, Yue Mascaro, Steven Bhuiyan, Mejbah Fathima, Parveen Mace, Ariel O. Nicol, Mark P. Richmond, Peter C. Kirkham, Lea-Ann Dymock, Michael Foley, David A. McLeod, Charlie Borland, Meredith L. Martin, Andrew Williams, Phoebe C. M. Marsh, Julie A. Snelling, Thomas L. Blyth, Christopher C. PLoS Comput Biol Research Article BACKGROUND: Pneumonia remains a leading cause of hospitalization and death among young children worldwide, and the diagnostic challenge of differentiating bacterial from non-bacterial pneumonia is the main driver of antibiotic use for treating pneumonia in children. Causal Bayesian networks (BNs) serve as powerful tools for this problem as they provide clear maps of probabilistic relationships between variables and produce results in an explainable way by incorporating both domain expert knowledge and numerical data. METHODS: We used domain expert knowledge and data in combination and iteratively, to construct, parameterise and validate a causal BN to predict causative pathogens for childhood pneumonia. Expert knowledge elicitation occurred through a series of group workshops, surveys and one-on-one meetings involving 6-8 experts from diverse domain areas. The model performance was evaluated based on both quantitative metrics and qualitative expert validation. Sensitivity analyses were conducted to investigate how the target output is influenced by varying key assumptions of a particularly high degree of uncertainty around data or domain expert knowledge. RESULTS: Designed to apply to a cohort of children with X-ray confirmed pneumonia who presented to a tertiary paediatric hospital in Australia, the resulting BN offers explainable and quantitative predictions on a range of variables of interest, including the diagnosis of bacterial pneumonia, detection of respiratory pathogens in the nasopharynx, and the clinical phenotype of a pneumonia episode. Satisfactory numeric performance has been achieved including an area under the receiver operating characteristic curve of 0.8 in predicting clinically-confirmed bacterial pneumonia with sensitivity 88% and specificity 66% given certain input scenarios (i.e., information that is available and entered into the model) and trade-off preferences (i.e., relative weightings of the consequences of false positive versus false negative predictions). We specifically highlight that a desirable model output threshold for practical use is very dependent upon different input scenarios and trade-off preferences. Three commonly encountered scenarios were presented to demonstrate the potential usefulness of the BN outputs in various clinical pictures. CONCLUSIONS: To our knowledge, this is the first causal model developed to help determine the causative pathogen for paediatric pneumonia. We have shown how the method works and how it would help decision making on the use of antibiotics, providing insight into how computational model predictions may be translated to actionable decisions in practice. We discussed key next steps including external validation, adaptation and implementation. Our model framework and the methodological approach can be adapted beyond our context to broad respiratory infections and geographical and healthcare settings. Public Library of Science 2023-03-13 /pmc/articles/PMC10035934/ /pubmed/36913404 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pcbi.1010967 Text en © 2023 Wu et al https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/This is an open access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/) , which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are credited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Wu, Yue
Mascaro, Steven
Bhuiyan, Mejbah
Fathima, Parveen
Mace, Ariel O.
Nicol, Mark P.
Richmond, Peter C.
Kirkham, Lea-Ann
Dymock, Michael
Foley, David A.
McLeod, Charlie
Borland, Meredith L.
Martin, Andrew
Williams, Phoebe C. M.
Marsh, Julie A.
Snelling, Thomas L.
Blyth, Christopher C.
Predicting the causative pathogen among children with pneumonia using a causal Bayesian network
title Predicting the causative pathogen among children with pneumonia using a causal Bayesian network
title_full Predicting the causative pathogen among children with pneumonia using a causal Bayesian network
title_fullStr Predicting the causative pathogen among children with pneumonia using a causal Bayesian network
title_full_unstemmed Predicting the causative pathogen among children with pneumonia using a causal Bayesian network
title_short Predicting the causative pathogen among children with pneumonia using a causal Bayesian network
title_sort predicting the causative pathogen among children with pneumonia using a causal bayesian network
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10035934/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/36913404
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pcbi.1010967
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