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Machine Learning Prediction of Postoperative Emergency Department Hospital Readmission

BACKGROUND:Although prediction of hospital readmissions has been studied in medical patients, it has received relatively little attention in surgical patient populations. Published predictors require information only available at the moment of discharge. The authors hypothesized that machine learnin...

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Bibliographic Details
Published in:Anesthesiology (Philadelphia) 2020-05, Vol.132 (5), p.968-980
Main Authors: Mišić, Velibor V., Gabel, Eilon, Hofer, Ira, Rajaram, Kumar, Mahajan, Aman
Format: Article
Language:English
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Summary:BACKGROUND:Although prediction of hospital readmissions has been studied in medical patients, it has received relatively little attention in surgical patient populations. Published predictors require information only available at the moment of discharge. The authors hypothesized that machine learning approaches can be leveraged to accurately predict readmissions in postoperative patients from the emergency department. Further, the authors hypothesize that these approaches can accurately predict the risk of readmission much sooner than hospital discharge. METHODS:Using a cohort of surgical patients at a tertiary care academic medical center, surgical, demographic, lab, medication, care team, and current procedural terminology data were extracted from the electronic health record. The primary outcome was whether there existed a future hospital readmission originating from the emergency department within 30 days of surgery. Secondarily, the time interval from surgery to the prediction was analyzed at 0, 12, 24, 36, 48, and 60 h. Different machine learning models for predicting the primary outcome were evaluated with respect to the area under the receiver-operator characteristic curve metric using different permutations of the available features. RESULTS:Surgical hospital admissions (N = 34,532) from April 2013 to December 2016 were included in the analysis. Surgical and demographic features led to moderate discrimination for prediction after discharge (area under the curve0.74 to 0.76), whereas medication, consulting team, and current procedural terminology features did not improve the discrimination. Lab features improved discrimination, with gradient-boosted trees attaining the best performance (area under the curve0.866, SD 0.006). This performance was sustained during temporal validation with 2017 to 2018 data (area under the curve0.85 to 0.88). Lastly, the discrimination of the predictions calculated 36 h after surgery (area under the curve0.88 to 0.89) nearly matched those from time of discharge. CONCLUSIONS:A machine learning approach to predicting postoperative readmission can produce hospital-specific models for accurately predicting 30-day readmissions via the emergency department. Moreover, these predictions can be confidently calculated at 36 h after surgery without consideration of discharge-level data.
ISSN:0003-3022
1528-1175
DOI:10.1097/ALN.0000000000003140