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A novel approach for prediction of tacrolimus blood concentration in liver transplantation patients in the intensive care unit through support vector regression

INTRODUCTION: Tacrolimus is an important immunosuppressive drug for organ transplantation patients. It has a narrow therapeutic range, toxic side effects, and a blood concentration with wide intra- and interindividual variability. Hence, it is of the utmost importance to monitor tacrolimus blood con...

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Autores principales: Van Looy, Stijn, Verplancke, Thierry, Benoit, Dominique, Hoste, Eric, Van Maele, Georges, De Turck, Filip, Decruyenaere, Johan
Formato: Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: BioMed Central 2007
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2206504/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/17655766
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/cc6081
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author Van Looy, Stijn
Verplancke, Thierry
Benoit, Dominique
Hoste, Eric
Van Maele, Georges
De Turck, Filip
Decruyenaere, Johan
author_facet Van Looy, Stijn
Verplancke, Thierry
Benoit, Dominique
Hoste, Eric
Van Maele, Georges
De Turck, Filip
Decruyenaere, Johan
author_sort Van Looy, Stijn
collection PubMed
description INTRODUCTION: Tacrolimus is an important immunosuppressive drug for organ transplantation patients. It has a narrow therapeutic range, toxic side effects, and a blood concentration with wide intra- and interindividual variability. Hence, it is of the utmost importance to monitor tacrolimus blood concentration, thereby ensuring clinical effect and avoiding toxic side effects. Prediction models for tacrolimus blood concentration can improve clinical care by optimizing monitoring of these concentrations, especially in the initial phase after transplantation during intensive care unit (ICU) stay. This is the first study in the ICU in which support vector machines, as a new data modeling technique, are investigated and tested in their prediction capabilities of tacrolimus blood concentration. Linear support vector regression (SVR) and nonlinear radial basis function (RBF) SVR are compared with multiple linear regression (MLR). METHODS: Tacrolimus blood concentrations, together with 35 other relevant variables from 50 liver transplantation patients, were extracted from our ICU database. This resulted in a dataset of 457 blood samples, on average between 9 and 10 samples per patient, finally resulting in a database of more than 16,000 data values. Nonlinear RBF SVR, linear SVR, and MLR were performed after selection of clinically relevant input variables and model parameters. Differences between observed and predicted tacrolimus blood concentrations were calculated. Prediction accuracy of the three methods was compared after fivefold cross-validation (Friedman test and Wilcoxon signed rank analysis). RESULTS: Linear SVR and nonlinear RBF SVR had mean absolute differences between observed and predicted tacrolimus blood concentrations of 2.31 ng/ml (standard deviation [SD] 2.47) and 2.38 ng/ml (SD 2.49), respectively. MLR had a mean absolute difference of 2.73 ng/ml (SD 3.79). The difference between linear SVR and MLR was statistically significant (p < 0.001). RBF SVR had the advantage of requiring only 2 input variables to perform this prediction in comparison to 15 and 16 variables needed by linear SVR and MLR, respectively. This is an indication of the superior prediction capability of nonlinear SVR. CONCLUSION: Prediction of tacrolimus blood concentration with linear and nonlinear SVR was excellent, and accuracy was superior in comparison with an MLR model.
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spelling pubmed-22065042008-01-19 A novel approach for prediction of tacrolimus blood concentration in liver transplantation patients in the intensive care unit through support vector regression Van Looy, Stijn Verplancke, Thierry Benoit, Dominique Hoste, Eric Van Maele, Georges De Turck, Filip Decruyenaere, Johan Crit Care Research INTRODUCTION: Tacrolimus is an important immunosuppressive drug for organ transplantation patients. It has a narrow therapeutic range, toxic side effects, and a blood concentration with wide intra- and interindividual variability. Hence, it is of the utmost importance to monitor tacrolimus blood concentration, thereby ensuring clinical effect and avoiding toxic side effects. Prediction models for tacrolimus blood concentration can improve clinical care by optimizing monitoring of these concentrations, especially in the initial phase after transplantation during intensive care unit (ICU) stay. This is the first study in the ICU in which support vector machines, as a new data modeling technique, are investigated and tested in their prediction capabilities of tacrolimus blood concentration. Linear support vector regression (SVR) and nonlinear radial basis function (RBF) SVR are compared with multiple linear regression (MLR). METHODS: Tacrolimus blood concentrations, together with 35 other relevant variables from 50 liver transplantation patients, were extracted from our ICU database. This resulted in a dataset of 457 blood samples, on average between 9 and 10 samples per patient, finally resulting in a database of more than 16,000 data values. Nonlinear RBF SVR, linear SVR, and MLR were performed after selection of clinically relevant input variables and model parameters. Differences between observed and predicted tacrolimus blood concentrations were calculated. Prediction accuracy of the three methods was compared after fivefold cross-validation (Friedman test and Wilcoxon signed rank analysis). RESULTS: Linear SVR and nonlinear RBF SVR had mean absolute differences between observed and predicted tacrolimus blood concentrations of 2.31 ng/ml (standard deviation [SD] 2.47) and 2.38 ng/ml (SD 2.49), respectively. MLR had a mean absolute difference of 2.73 ng/ml (SD 3.79). The difference between linear SVR and MLR was statistically significant (p < 0.001). RBF SVR had the advantage of requiring only 2 input variables to perform this prediction in comparison to 15 and 16 variables needed by linear SVR and MLR, respectively. This is an indication of the superior prediction capability of nonlinear SVR. CONCLUSION: Prediction of tacrolimus blood concentration with linear and nonlinear SVR was excellent, and accuracy was superior in comparison with an MLR model. BioMed Central 2007 2007-07-26 /pmc/articles/PMC2206504/ /pubmed/17655766 http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/cc6081 Text en Copyright © 2007 Van Looy et al.; licensee BioMed Central Ltd. http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.0 This is an open access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License ( (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.0) ), which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
spellingShingle Research
Van Looy, Stijn
Verplancke, Thierry
Benoit, Dominique
Hoste, Eric
Van Maele, Georges
De Turck, Filip
Decruyenaere, Johan
A novel approach for prediction of tacrolimus blood concentration in liver transplantation patients in the intensive care unit through support vector regression
title A novel approach for prediction of tacrolimus blood concentration in liver transplantation patients in the intensive care unit through support vector regression
title_full A novel approach for prediction of tacrolimus blood concentration in liver transplantation patients in the intensive care unit through support vector regression
title_fullStr A novel approach for prediction of tacrolimus blood concentration in liver transplantation patients in the intensive care unit through support vector regression
title_full_unstemmed A novel approach for prediction of tacrolimus blood concentration in liver transplantation patients in the intensive care unit through support vector regression
title_short A novel approach for prediction of tacrolimus blood concentration in liver transplantation patients in the intensive care unit through support vector regression
title_sort novel approach for prediction of tacrolimus blood concentration in liver transplantation patients in the intensive care unit through support vector regression
topic Research
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2206504/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/17655766
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/cc6081
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