Literature DB >> 30815095

Clinical Document Classification Using Labeled and Unlabeled Data Across Hospitals.

Hamed Hassanzadeh1, Mahnoosh Kholghi1, Anthony Nguyen1, Kevin Chu2.   

Abstract

Reviewing radiology reports in emergency departments is an essential but laborious task. Timely follow-up of patients with abnormal cases in their radiology reports may dramatically affect the patient's outcome, especially if they have been discharged with a different initial diagnosis. Machine learning approaches have been devised to expedite the process and detect the cases that demand instant follow up. However, these approaches require a large amount of labeled data to train reliable predictive models. Preparing such a large dataset, which needs to be manually annotated by health professionals, is costly and time-consuming. This paper investigates a semi-supervised transfer learning framework for radiology report classification across three hospitals. The main goal is to leverage both vastly available clinical unlabeled data and already learned knowledge in order to improve a learning model where limited labeled data is available. Our experimental findings show that (1) convolutional neural networks (CNNs), while being independent of any problem-specific feature engineering, achieve significantly higher effectiveness compared to conventional supervised learning approaches, (2) leveraging unlabeled data in training a CNN-based classifier reduces the dependency on labeled data by more than 50% to reach the same performance of a fully supervised CNN, and (3) transferring the knowledge gained from available labeled data in an external source hospital significantly improves the performance of a semi-supervised CNN model over their fully supervised counterparts in a target hospital.

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Mesh:

Year:  2018        PMID: 30815095      PMCID: PMC6371298     

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  AMIA Annu Symp Proc        ISSN: 1559-4076


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