Semi-supervised approach to event time annotation using longitudinal electronic health records.
Liang LiangJue HouHajime UnoKelly ChoYanyuan MaTianxi CaiPublished in: Lifetime data analysis (2022)
Large clinical datasets derived from insurance claims and electronic health record (EHR) systems are valuable sources for precision medicine research. These datasets can be used to develop models for personalized prediction of risk or treatment response. Efficiently deriving prediction models using real world data, however, faces practical and methodological challenges. Precise information on important clinical outcomes such as time to cancer progression are not readily available in these databases. The true clinical event times typically cannot be approximated well based on simple extracts of billing or procedure codes. Whereas, annotating event times manually is time and resource prohibitive. In this paper, we propose a two-step semi-supervised multi-modal automated time annotation (MATA) method leveraging multi-dimensional longitudinal EHR encounter records. In step I, we employ a functional principal component analysis approach to estimate the underlying intensity functions based on observed point processes from the unlabeled patients. In step II, we fit a penalized proportional odds model to the event time outcomes with features derived in step I in the labeled data where the non-parametric baseline function is approximated using B-splines. Under regularity conditions, the resulting estimator of the feature effect vector is shown as root-n consistent. We demonstrate the superiority of our approach relative to existing approaches through simulations and a real data example on annotating lung cancer recurrence in an EHR cohort of lung cancer patients from Veteran Health Administration.
Keyphrases
- electronic health record
- machine learning
- clinical decision support
- rna seq
- adverse drug
- end stage renal disease
- deep learning
- health insurance
- chronic kidney disease
- ejection fraction
- newly diagnosed
- big data
- prognostic factors
- papillary thyroid
- type diabetes
- drinking water
- squamous cell carcinoma
- minimally invasive
- artificial intelligence
- climate change
- squamous cell
- computed tomography
- affordable care act
- patient reported
- human health
- monte carlo
- glycemic control