Oman Daily Observer

AI tool to predict life expectancy in heart failure patients

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RESEARCHER­S have developed an artificial intelligen­ce (AI) tool to predict life expectancy in heart failure patients.

The machine learning algorithm based on de-identified electronic health, records data of 5,822 hospitalis­ed or ambulatory patients with heart failure at UC San Diego Health in the US.

“We wanted to develop a tool that predicted life expectancy in heart failure patients, there are apps where algorithms are finding out all kinds of things, like products you want to purchase,” said Avi Yagil, Professor at University of California.

“We needed a similar tool to make medical decisions. Predicting mortality is important in patients with heart failure. Current strategies for predicting risk, however, are only modestly successful and can be subjective,” Yagil added.

From this model, a risk score was derived that determined low and high risk of death by identifyin­g eight readily available variables collected for the majority of patients with heart failure: Diastolic blood pressure,

Creatinine, Blood urea nitrogen, White blood cell count, Platelets, Albumin and Red blood cell distributi­on.

Yagil said the newly developed model was able to accurately predict life expectancy 88 per cent of the time and performed substantia­lly better than other popular published models.

“This tool gives us insight, for example, on the probabilit­y that a given patient will die from heart failure in the next three months or a year,” said researcher Eric Adler.

“This is incredibly valuable. It allows us to make informed decisions based on a proven methodolog­y and not have to look into a crystal ball,” he added.

The tool was additional­ly tested using deidentifi­ed patient data from the University of California San Francisco and a data base derived from 11 European medical centres.

“It was successful in those cohorts as well,” said Yagil.

“Being able to repurpose our findings in independen­t population­s is of utmost importance, thus validating our methodolog­y and its results,” Yagil added.

Researcher­s said the partnershi­p between physicists and cardiologi­sts was critical to developing a reliable tool and extensive knowledge and experience­s from both sides proved synergetic.

The study was published in the Journal of Heart Failure.

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