A multiple-model generalisation of updating clinical prediction models.
Glen Philip MartinMamas A MamasNiels PeekIain BuchanMatthew SperrinPublished in: Statistics in medicine (2017)
There is growing interest in developing clinical prediction models (CPMs) to aid local healthcare decision-making. Frequently, these CPMs are developed in isolation across different populations, with repetitive de novo derivation a common modelling strategy. However, this fails to utilise all available information and does not respond to changes in health processes through time and space. Alternatively, model updating techniques have previously been proposed that adjust an existing CPM to suit the new population, but these techniques are restricted to a single model. Therefore, we aimed to develop a generalised method for updating and aggregating multiple CPMs. The proposed "hybrid method" re-calibrates multiple CPMs using stacked regression while concurrently revising specific covariates using individual participant data (IPD) under a penalised likelihood. The performance of the hybrid method was compared with existing methods in a clinical example of mortality risk prediction after transcatheter aortic valve implantation, and in 2 simulation studies. The simulation studies explored the effect of sample size and between-population-heterogeneity on the method, with each representing a situation of having multiple distinct CPMs and 1 set of IPD. When the sample size of the IPD was small, stacked regression and the hybrid method had comparable but highest performance across modelling methods. Conversely, in large IPD samples, development of a new model and the hybrid method gave the highest performance. Hence, the proposed strategy can inform the choice between utilising existing CPMs or developing a model de novo, thereby incorporating IPD, existing research, and prior (clinical) knowledge into the modelling strategy.
Keyphrases
- healthcare
- transcatheter aortic valve implantation
- decision making
- working memory
- cardiovascular disease
- mental health
- type diabetes
- aortic valve replacement
- coronary artery disease
- single cell
- risk factors
- electronic health record
- big data
- climate change
- atrial fibrillation
- transcatheter aortic valve replacement
- aortic stenosis
- data analysis