Identifying mortality risk factors amongst acute coronary syndrome patients admitted to Arabian Gulf hospitals using machine-learning methods
Author(s)
Raza, SA
Thalib, L
Al Suwaidi, J
Sulaiman, K
Almahmeed, W
Amin, H
AlHabib, KF
Griffith University Author(s)
Year published
2019
Metadata
Show full item recordAbstract
Acute coronary syndrome (ACS) is a leading cause of mortality and morbidity in the Arabian Gulf. In this study, the in‐hospital mortality amongst patients admitted with ACS to Arabian Gulf hospitals is predicted using a comprehensive modelling framework that combines powerful machine‐learning methods such as support‐vector machine (SVM), Naïve Bayes (NB), artificial neural networks (NN), and decision trees (DT). The performance of the machine‐learning methods is compared with that of the performance of a commonly used statistical method, namely, logistic regression (LR). The study follows the current practise of computing ...
View more >Acute coronary syndrome (ACS) is a leading cause of mortality and morbidity in the Arabian Gulf. In this study, the in‐hospital mortality amongst patients admitted with ACS to Arabian Gulf hospitals is predicted using a comprehensive modelling framework that combines powerful machine‐learning methods such as support‐vector machine (SVM), Naïve Bayes (NB), artificial neural networks (NN), and decision trees (DT). The performance of the machine‐learning methods is compared with that of the performance of a commonly used statistical method, namely, logistic regression (LR). The study follows the current practise of computing mortality risk using risk scores such as the Global Registry of Acute Coronary Events (GRACE) score, which has not been validated for Arabian Gulf patients. Cardiac registry data of 7,000 patients from 65 hospitals located in Arabian Gulf countries are used for the study. This study is unique as it uses a contemporary data analytics framework. A k‐fold (k = 10) cross‐validation is utilized to generate training and validation samples from the GRACE dataset. The machine‐learning‐based predictive models often incur prejudgments for imbalanced training data patterns. To mitigate the data imbalance due to scarce observations for in‐hospital mortalities, we have utilized specialized methods such as random undersampling (RUS) and synthetic minority over sampling technique (SMOTE). A detailed simulation experimentation is carried out to build models with each of the five predictive methods (LR, NN, NB, SVM, and DT) for the each of the three datasets k‐fold subsamples generated. The predictive models are developed under three schemes of the k‐fold samples that include no data imbalance, RUS, and SMOTE. We have implemented an information fusion method rooted in computing weighted impact scores obtain for an individual medical history attributes from each of the predictive models simulated for a collective recommendation based on an impact score specific to a predictor. Finally, we grouped the predictors using fuzzy c‐mean clustering method into three categories, high‐, medium‐, and low‐risk factors for in‐hospital mortality due to ACS. Our study revealed that patients with medical history related to the presences of peripheral artery disease, congestive heart failure, cardiovascular transient ischemic attack valvular disease, and coronary artery bypass grafting amongst others have the most risk for in‐hospital mortality.
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View more >Acute coronary syndrome (ACS) is a leading cause of mortality and morbidity in the Arabian Gulf. In this study, the in‐hospital mortality amongst patients admitted with ACS to Arabian Gulf hospitals is predicted using a comprehensive modelling framework that combines powerful machine‐learning methods such as support‐vector machine (SVM), Naïve Bayes (NB), artificial neural networks (NN), and decision trees (DT). The performance of the machine‐learning methods is compared with that of the performance of a commonly used statistical method, namely, logistic regression (LR). The study follows the current practise of computing mortality risk using risk scores such as the Global Registry of Acute Coronary Events (GRACE) score, which has not been validated for Arabian Gulf patients. Cardiac registry data of 7,000 patients from 65 hospitals located in Arabian Gulf countries are used for the study. This study is unique as it uses a contemporary data analytics framework. A k‐fold (k = 10) cross‐validation is utilized to generate training and validation samples from the GRACE dataset. The machine‐learning‐based predictive models often incur prejudgments for imbalanced training data patterns. To mitigate the data imbalance due to scarce observations for in‐hospital mortalities, we have utilized specialized methods such as random undersampling (RUS) and synthetic minority over sampling technique (SMOTE). A detailed simulation experimentation is carried out to build models with each of the five predictive methods (LR, NN, NB, SVM, and DT) for the each of the three datasets k‐fold subsamples generated. The predictive models are developed under three schemes of the k‐fold samples that include no data imbalance, RUS, and SMOTE. We have implemented an information fusion method rooted in computing weighted impact scores obtain for an individual medical history attributes from each of the predictive models simulated for a collective recommendation based on an impact score specific to a predictor. Finally, we grouped the predictors using fuzzy c‐mean clustering method into three categories, high‐, medium‐, and low‐risk factors for in‐hospital mortality due to ACS. Our study revealed that patients with medical history related to the presences of peripheral artery disease, congestive heart failure, cardiovascular transient ischemic attack valvular disease, and coronary artery bypass grafting amongst others have the most risk for in‐hospital mortality.
View less >
Journal Title
Expert Systems
Volume
36
Issue
4
Subject
Artificial intelligence
Cognitive and computational psychology
Science & Technology
Technology
Computer Science, Artificial Intelligence
Computer Science, Theory & Methods