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Detection of Bacteremia in Surgical In-Patients Using Recurrent Neural Network Based on ...
- Date of publication
- 2020.04.22
- Issuing agency (Year)
- JMIR(2020)
- Author
- HyungJun Park, Daeyon Jung, Wonjun Ji, Changmin Choi
- Link
- https://www.jmir.org/2020/8/e19512/
Abstract
Background: Detecting bacteremia among surgical in-patients is more obscure than other patients due to the inflammatory
condition caused by the surgery. The previous criteria such as systemic inflammatory response syndrome or Sepsis-3 are not
available for use in general wards, and thus, many clinicians usually rely on practical senses to diagnose postoperative infection.
Objective: This study aims to evaluate the performance of continuous monitoring with a deep learning model for early detection
of bacteremia for surgical in-patients in the general ward and the intensive care unit (ICU).
Methods: In this retrospective cohort study, we included 36,023 consecutive patients who underwent general surgery between
October and December 2017 at a tertiary referral hospital in South Korea. The primary outcome was the area under the receiver
operating characteristic curve (AUROC) and the area under the precision-recall curve (AUPRC) for detecting bacteremia by the
deep learning model, and the secondary outcome was the feature explainability of the model by occlusion analysis.
Results: Out of the 36,023 patients in the data set, 720 cases of bacteremia were included. Our deep learning–based model
showed an AUROC of 0.97 (95% CI 0.974-0.981) and an AUPRC of 0.17 (95% CI 0.147-0.203) for detecting bacteremia in
surgical in-patients. For predicting bacteremia within the previous 24-hour period, the AUROC and AUPRC values were 0.93
and 0.15, respectively. Occlusion analysis showed that vital signs and laboratory measurements (eg, kidney function test and
white blood cell group) were the most important variables for detecting bacteremia.
Conclusions: A deep learning model based on time series electronic health records data had a high detective ability for bacteremia
for surgical in-patients in the general ward and the ICU. The model may be able to assist clinicians in evaluating infection among
in-patients, ordering blood cultures, and prescribing antibiotics with real-time monitoring.
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