A machine learning approach to predict healthcare-associated infections at intensive care unit admission: findings from the SPIN-UTI project

0301 basic medicine Cross Infection Healthcare-associated infections intensive care unit Risk prediction 3. Good health Machine Learning risk prediction Intensive Care Units 03 medical and health sciences machine learning healthcare-associated infections ROC Curve Machine learning Humans Intensive care unit Hospital Mortality healthcare-associated infections; intensive care unit; machine learning; risk prediction Delivery of Health Care
DOI: 10.1016/j.jhin.2021.02.025 Publication Date: 2021-03-05T21:22:46Z
ABSTRACT
Identifying patients at higher risk of healthcare-associated infections (HAIs) in intensive care units (ICUs) represents a major challenge for public health. Machine learning could improve patient risk stratification and lead to targeted infection prevention and control interventions.To evaluate the performance of the Simplified Acute Physiology Score (SAPS) II for HAI risk prediction in ICUs, using both traditional statistical and machine learning approaches.Data for 7827 patients from the 'Italian Nosocomial Infections Surveillance in Intensive Care Units' project were used in this study. The Support Vector Machines (SVM) algorithm was applied to classify patients according to sex, patient origin, non-surgical treatment for acute coronary disease, surgical intervention, SAPS II at admission, presence of invasive devices, trauma, impaired immunity, and antibiotic therapy in 48 h preceding ICU admission.The performance of SAPS II for predicting HAI risk provides a receiver operating characteristic curve with an area under the curve of 0.612 (P<0.001) and accuracy of 56%. Considering SAPS II along with other characteristics at ICU admission, the SVM classifier was found to have accuracy of 88% and an AUC of 0.90 (P<0.001) for the test set. The predictive ability was lower when considering the same SVM model but with the SAPS II variable removed (accuracy 78%, AUC 0.66).This study suggested that the SVM model is a useful tool for early prediction of patients at higher risk of HAIs at ICU admission.
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