Predicting inpatient clinical order patterns with probabilistic topic models vs conventional order sets

Author:

Chen Jonathan H1,Goldstein Mary K23,Asch Steven M14,Mackey Lester5,Altman Russ B167

Affiliation:

1. Department of Medicine, Stanford University, Stanford, CA, USA

2. Geriatrics Research Education and Clinical Center, Veteran Affairs Palo Alto Health Care System, Palo Alto, CA, USA

3. Primary Care and Outcomes Research (PCOR), Stanford University, Stanford, CA, USA

4. Center for Innovation to Implementation (Ci2i), Veteran Affairs Palo Alto Health Care System, Palo Alto, CA, USA

5. Department of Statistics, Stanford University, Stanford, CA, USA

6. Department of Bioengineering, Stanford University, Stanford, CA, USA

7. Department of Genetics, Stanford University, Stanford, CA, USA

Abstract

Objective: Build probabilistic topic model representations of hospital admissions processes and compare the ability of such models to predict clinical order patterns as compared to preconstructed order sets. Materials and Methods: The authors evaluated the first 24 hours of structured electronic health record data for > 10 K inpatients. Drawing an analogy between structured items (e.g., clinical orders) to words in a text document, the authors performed latent Dirichlet allocation probabilistic topic modeling. These topic models use initial clinical information to predict clinical orders for a separate validation set of > 4 K patients. The authors evaluated these topic model-based predictions vs existing human-authored order sets by area under the receiver operating characteristic curve, precision, and recall for subsequent clinical orders. Results: Existing order sets predict clinical orders used within 24 hours with area under the receiver operating characteristic curve 0.81, precision 16%, and recall 35%. This can be improved to 0.90, 24%, and 47% (P < 10−20) by using probabilistic topic models to summarize clinical data into up to 32 topics. Many of these latent topics yield natural clinical interpretations (e.g., “critical care,” “pneumonia,” “neurologic evaluation”). Discussion: Existing order sets tend to provide nonspecific, process-oriented aid, with usability limitations impairing more precise, patient-focused support. Algorithmic summarization has the potential to breach this usability barrier by automatically inferring patient context, but with potential tradeoffs in interpretability. Conclusion: Probabilistic topic modeling provides an automated approach to detect thematic trends in patient care and generate decision support content. A potential use case finds related clinical orders for decision support.

Funder

National Institute of Environmental Health Sciences of the National Institutes of Health

Stanford Translational Research

Department of Medicine

Stanford Learning Healthcare Systems Innovation Fund

Stanford Clinical and Translational Science Award

National Center for Advancing Translational Sciences

National Institutes of Health

Health Services Research and Development Service Research funds

National Institutes of Health/National Institute of General Medical Sciences

Stanford NIH/National Center for Research Resources CTSA

Stanford Translational Research Integrated Database Environment

National Center for Research Resources

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Subject

Health Informatics

Reference63 articles.

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