patient outcome prediction
INSPECT: A Multimodal Dataset for Patient Outcome Prediction of Pulmonary Embolisms
Synthesizing information from various data sources plays a crucial role in the practice of modern medicine. Current applications of artificial intelligence in medicine often focus on single-modality data due to a lack of publicly available, multimodal medical datasets. To address this limitation, we introduce INSPECT, which contains de-identified longitudinal records from a large cohort of pulmonary embolism (PE) patients, along with ground truth labels for multiple outcomes. INSPECT contains data from 19,402 patients, including CT images, sections of radiology reports, and structured electronic health record (EHR) data (including demographics, diagnoses, procedures, and vitals). Using our provided dataset, we develop and release a benchmark for evaluating several baseline modeling approaches on a variety of important PE related tasks. We evaluate image-only, EHR-only, and fused models. Trained models and the de-identified dataset are made available for non-commercial use under a data use agreement. To the best our knowledge, INSPECT is the largest multimodal dataset for enabling reproducible research on strategies for integrating 3D medical imaging and EHR data.
INSPECT: A Multimodal Dataset for Patient Outcome Prediction of Pulmonary Embolisms
Synthesizing information from various data sources plays a crucial role in the practice of modern medicine. Current applications of artificial intelligence in medicine often focus on single-modality data due to a lack of publicly available, multimodal medical datasets. To address this limitation, we introduce INSPECT, which contains de-identified longitudinal records from a large cohort of pulmonary embolism (PE) patients, along with ground truth labels for multiple outcomes. INSPECT contains data from 19,402 patients, including CT images, sections of radiology reports, and structured electronic health record (EHR) data (including demographics, diagnoses, procedures, and vitals). Using our provided dataset, we develop and release a benchmark for evaluating several baseline modeling approaches on a variety of important PE related tasks.
Patient Outcome and Zero-shot Diagnosis Prediction with Hypernetwork-guided Multitask Learning
Ji, Shaoxiong, Marttinen, Pekka
Multitask deep learning has been applied to patient outcome prediction from text, taking clinical notes as input and training deep neural networks with a joint loss function of multiple tasks. However, the joint training scheme of multitask learning suffers from inter-task interference, and diagnosis prediction among the multiple tasks has the generalizability issue due to rare diseases or unseen diagnoses. To solve these challenges, we propose a hypernetwork-based approach that generates task-conditioned parameters and coefficients of multitask prediction heads to learn task-specific prediction and balance the multitask learning. We also incorporate semantic task information to improves the generalizability of our task-conditioned multitask model. Experiments on early and discharge notes extracted from the real-world MIMIC database show our method can achieve better performance on multitask patient outcome prediction than strong baselines in most cases. Besides, our method can effectively handle the scenario with limited information and improve zero-shot prediction on unseen diagnosis categories.
Textual Data Augmentation for Patient Outcomes Prediction
Lu, Qiuhao, Dou, Dejing, Nguyen, Thien Huu
Deep learning models have demonstrated superior performance in various healthcare applications. However, the major limitation of these deep models is usually the lack of high-quality training data due to the private and sensitive nature of this field. In this study, we propose a novel textual data augmentation method to generate artificial clinical notes in patients' Electronic Health Records (EHRs) that can be used as additional training data for patient outcomes prediction. Essentially, we fine-tune the generative language model GPT-2 to synthesize labeled text with the original training data. More specifically, We propose a teacher-student framework where we first pre-train a teacher model on the original data, and then train a student model on the GPT-augmented data under the guidance of the teacher. We evaluate our method on the most common patient outcome, i.e., the 30-day readmission rate. The experimental results show that deep models can improve their predictive performance with the augmented data, indicating the effectiveness of the proposed architecture.
- North America > United States > Oregon > Lane County > Eugene (0.14)
- North America > United States > Minnesota > Hennepin County > Minneapolis (0.14)
- Europe > France > Provence-Alpes-Côte d'Azur > Bouches-du-Rhône > Marseille (0.04)
- Asia > China > Beijing > Beijing (0.04)