Reinforced Risk Prediction With Budget Constraint Using Irregularly Measured Data From Electronic Health Records

成果类型:
Article
署名作者:
Pan, Yinghao; Laber, Eric B.; Smith, Maureen A.; Zhao, Ying-Qi
署名单位:
University of North Carolina; University of North Carolina Charlotte; North Carolina State University; University of Wisconsin System; University of Wisconsin Madison; Fred Hutchinson Cancer Center
刊物名称:
JOURNAL OF THE AMERICAN STATISTICAL ASSOCIATION
ISSN/ISSBN:
0162-1459
DOI:
10.1080/01621459.2021.1978467
发表日期:
2023
页码:
1090-1101
关键词:
functional data-analysis CLASSIFICATION performance disease SPARSE
摘要:
Uncontrolled glycated hemoglobin (HbA1c) levels are associated with adverse events among complex diabetic patients. These adverse events present serious health risks to affected patients and are associated with significant financial costs. Thus, a high-quality predictive model that could identify high-risk patients so as to inform preventative treatment has the potential to improve patient outcomes while reducing healthcare costs. Because the biomarker information needed to predict risk is costly and burdensome, it is desirable that such a model collect only as much information as is needed on each patient so as to render an accurate prediction. We propose a sequential predictive model that uses accumulating patient longitudinal data to classify patients as: high-risk, low-risk, or uncertain. Patients classified as high-risk are then recommended to receive preventative treatment and those classified as low-risk are recommended to standard care. Patients classified as uncertain are monitored until a high-risk or low-risk determination is made. We construct the model using claims and enrollment files from Medicare, linked with patient electronic health records (EHR) data. The proposed model uses functional principal components to accommodate noisy longitudinal data and weighting to deal with missingness and sampling bias. The proposed method demonstrates higher predictive accuracy and lower cost than competing methods in a series of simulation experiments and application to data on complex patients with diabetes. Supplementary materials for this article are available online.