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Deep Learning With Electronic Health Records for Short-Term Fracture Risk Identification: Crystal Bone Algorithm Development and Validation

BACKGROUND: Fractures as a result of osteoporosis and low bone mass are common and give rise to significant clinical, personal, and economic burden. Even after a fracture occurs, high fracture risk remains widely underdiagnosed and undertreated. Common fracture risk assessment tools utilize a subset...

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Autores principales: Almog, Yasmeen Adar, Rai, Angshu, Zhang, Patrick, Moulaison, Amanda, Powell, Ross, Mishra, Anirban, Weinberg, Kerry, Hamilton, Celeste, Oates, Mary, McCloskey, Eugene, Cummings, Steven R
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: JMIR Publications 2020
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7600029/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/32956069
http://dx.doi.org/10.2196/22550
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author Almog, Yasmeen Adar
Rai, Angshu
Zhang, Patrick
Moulaison, Amanda
Powell, Ross
Mishra, Anirban
Weinberg, Kerry
Hamilton, Celeste
Oates, Mary
McCloskey, Eugene
Cummings, Steven R
author_facet Almog, Yasmeen Adar
Rai, Angshu
Zhang, Patrick
Moulaison, Amanda
Powell, Ross
Mishra, Anirban
Weinberg, Kerry
Hamilton, Celeste
Oates, Mary
McCloskey, Eugene
Cummings, Steven R
author_sort Almog, Yasmeen Adar
collection PubMed
description BACKGROUND: Fractures as a result of osteoporosis and low bone mass are common and give rise to significant clinical, personal, and economic burden. Even after a fracture occurs, high fracture risk remains widely underdiagnosed and undertreated. Common fracture risk assessment tools utilize a subset of clinical risk factors for prediction, and often require manual data entry. Furthermore, these tools predict risk over the long term and do not explicitly provide short-term risk estimates necessary to identify patients likely to experience a fracture in the next 1-2 years. OBJECTIVE: The goal of this study was to develop and evaluate an algorithm for the identification of patients at risk of fracture in a subsequent 1- to 2-year period. In order to address the aforementioned limitations of current prediction tools, this approach focused on a short-term timeframe, automated data entry, and the use of longitudinal data to inform the predictions. METHODS: Using retrospective electronic health record data from over 1,000,000 patients, we developed Crystal Bone, an algorithm that applies machine learning techniques from natural language processing to the temporal nature of patient histories to generate short-term fracture risk predictions. Similar to how language models predict the next word in a given sentence or the topic of a document, Crystal Bone predicts whether a patient’s future trajectory might contain a fracture event, or whether the signature of the patient’s journey is similar to that of a typical future fracture patient. A holdout set with 192,590 patients was used to validate accuracy. Experimental baseline models and human-level performance were used for comparison. RESULTS: The model accurately predicted 1- to 2-year fracture risk for patients aged over 50 years (area under the receiver operating characteristics curve [AUROC] 0.81). These algorithms outperformed the experimental baselines (AUROC 0.67) and showed meaningful improvements when compared to retrospective approximation of human-level performance by correctly identifying 9649 of 13,765 (70%) at-risk patients who did not receive any preventative bone-health-related medical interventions from their physicians. CONCLUSIONS: These findings indicate that it is possible to use a patient’s unique medical history as it changes over time to predict the risk of short-term fracture. Validating and applying such a tool within the health care system could enable automated and widespread prediction of this risk and may help with identification of patients at very high risk of fracture.
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spelling pubmed-76000292020-11-02 Deep Learning With Electronic Health Records for Short-Term Fracture Risk Identification: Crystal Bone Algorithm Development and Validation Almog, Yasmeen Adar Rai, Angshu Zhang, Patrick Moulaison, Amanda Powell, Ross Mishra, Anirban Weinberg, Kerry Hamilton, Celeste Oates, Mary McCloskey, Eugene Cummings, Steven R J Med Internet Res Original Paper BACKGROUND: Fractures as a result of osteoporosis and low bone mass are common and give rise to significant clinical, personal, and economic burden. Even after a fracture occurs, high fracture risk remains widely underdiagnosed and undertreated. Common fracture risk assessment tools utilize a subset of clinical risk factors for prediction, and often require manual data entry. Furthermore, these tools predict risk over the long term and do not explicitly provide short-term risk estimates necessary to identify patients likely to experience a fracture in the next 1-2 years. OBJECTIVE: The goal of this study was to develop and evaluate an algorithm for the identification of patients at risk of fracture in a subsequent 1- to 2-year period. In order to address the aforementioned limitations of current prediction tools, this approach focused on a short-term timeframe, automated data entry, and the use of longitudinal data to inform the predictions. METHODS: Using retrospective electronic health record data from over 1,000,000 patients, we developed Crystal Bone, an algorithm that applies machine learning techniques from natural language processing to the temporal nature of patient histories to generate short-term fracture risk predictions. Similar to how language models predict the next word in a given sentence or the topic of a document, Crystal Bone predicts whether a patient’s future trajectory might contain a fracture event, or whether the signature of the patient’s journey is similar to that of a typical future fracture patient. A holdout set with 192,590 patients was used to validate accuracy. Experimental baseline models and human-level performance were used for comparison. RESULTS: The model accurately predicted 1- to 2-year fracture risk for patients aged over 50 years (area under the receiver operating characteristics curve [AUROC] 0.81). These algorithms outperformed the experimental baselines (AUROC 0.67) and showed meaningful improvements when compared to retrospective approximation of human-level performance by correctly identifying 9649 of 13,765 (70%) at-risk patients who did not receive any preventative bone-health-related medical interventions from their physicians. CONCLUSIONS: These findings indicate that it is possible to use a patient’s unique medical history as it changes over time to predict the risk of short-term fracture. Validating and applying such a tool within the health care system could enable automated and widespread prediction of this risk and may help with identification of patients at very high risk of fracture. JMIR Publications 2020-10-16 /pmc/articles/PMC7600029/ /pubmed/32956069 http://dx.doi.org/10.2196/22550 Text en ©Yasmeen Adar Almog, Angshu Rai, Patrick Zhang, Amanda Moulaison, Ross Powell, Anirban Mishra, Kerry Weinberg, Celeste Hamilton, Mary Oates, Eugene McCloskey, Steven R Cummings. Originally published in the Journal of Medical Internet Research (http://www.jmir.org), 16.10.2020. 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 work, first published in the Journal of Medical Internet Research, is properly cited. The complete bibliographic information, a link to the original publication on http://www.jmir.org/, as well as this copyright and license information must be included.
spellingShingle Original Paper
Almog, Yasmeen Adar
Rai, Angshu
Zhang, Patrick
Moulaison, Amanda
Powell, Ross
Mishra, Anirban
Weinberg, Kerry
Hamilton, Celeste
Oates, Mary
McCloskey, Eugene
Cummings, Steven R
Deep Learning With Electronic Health Records for Short-Term Fracture Risk Identification: Crystal Bone Algorithm Development and Validation
title Deep Learning With Electronic Health Records for Short-Term Fracture Risk Identification: Crystal Bone Algorithm Development and Validation
title_full Deep Learning With Electronic Health Records for Short-Term Fracture Risk Identification: Crystal Bone Algorithm Development and Validation
title_fullStr Deep Learning With Electronic Health Records for Short-Term Fracture Risk Identification: Crystal Bone Algorithm Development and Validation
title_full_unstemmed Deep Learning With Electronic Health Records for Short-Term Fracture Risk Identification: Crystal Bone Algorithm Development and Validation
title_short Deep Learning With Electronic Health Records for Short-Term Fracture Risk Identification: Crystal Bone Algorithm Development and Validation
title_sort deep learning with electronic health records for short-term fracture risk identification: crystal bone algorithm development and validation
topic Original Paper
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7600029/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/32956069
http://dx.doi.org/10.2196/22550
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