| Literature DB >> 34920724 |
Hua Zheng1, Jiahao Zhu1, Wei Xie2, Judy Zhong3.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Patients with severe Coronavirus disease 19 (COVID-19) typically require supplemental oxygen as an essential treatment. We developed a machine learning algorithm, based on deep Reinforcement Learning (RL), for continuous management of oxygen flow rate for critically ill patients under intensive care, which can identify the optimal personalized oxygen flow rate with strong potentials to reduce mortality rate relative to the current clinical practice.Entities:
Year: 2021 PMID: 34920724 PMCID: PMC8678583 DOI: 10.1186/s12911-021-01712-6
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Med Inform Decis Mak ISSN: 1472-6947 Impact factor: 2.796
Fig. 1The diagram of the proposed RL scheme with the actor-critic architecture using electronic health records from New York University Langone Health (NYULH)
Demographics and clinical characteristics of NYULH-EHR patients with COVID-19
| Demographics and clinic characteristics | Number of patients (N = 1372) |
|---|---|
| Age (years, Mean (SD)) | 69.72 (10.75) |
| Male (N (%)) | 64.49 (0.47) |
| Race (N(%)) | |
| African American | 180 (13.12) |
| Native American | 5 (0.36) |
| Asian | 120 (8.75) |
| Caucasian (White) | 730 (53.21) |
| Multiple races | 19 (1.39) |
| Other races | 266 (19.39) |
| Race unknown or patient refused | 53 (3.86) |
| Smoking (N(%)) | 1043 (6.88) |
| Never | 735 (53.57) |
| Former | 443 (32.29) |
| Current | 55 (4.01) |
| Not asked | 139 (10.13) |
| Body mass index (kg/m2), Mean (SD) | 28.61 (6.74) |
| Hyperlipidemia (N(%)) | 978 (71.75) |
| Coronary artery disease (N(%)) | 562 (41.23) |
| Heart failure (N(%)) | 406 (29.79) |
| Hypertension (N(%)) | 1161 (85.18) |
| Diabetes (N(%)) | 701 (51.43) |
| Asthma or chronic obstructive pulmonary (N(%)) | 217 (15.92) |
| Dementia (N(%)) | 133 (9.76) |
| Stroke (N(%)) | 195 (14.31) |
Categorical variables are summarized with frequencies (percentages) unless otherwise indicated. Continuous variables are summarized as the mean (standard deviation) of biomarkers
Subgroup comparison of 7-day estimated mortality obtained using RL-oxygen algorithm and critical care physician decision guidance
| Subgroups | Estimated mortality (%) | Average oxygen (L/min) | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| RL-oxygen | Physician | RL-oxygen | Physician | |
| Overall | 5.37 (0.22) | 7.94 (0.27) | 19.24 (0.07)* | 20.52 (0.07) |
| Male | 6.13 (0.12)* | 8.53 (0.14) | 21.20 (0.09)* | 22.66 (0.09) |
| Female | 2.18 (0.11)* | 2.99 (0.12) | 6.33 (0.07) | 6.41 (0.07) |
| Age | ||||
| 50–65 | 1.19 (0.08)* | 1.74 (0.09) | 25.54 (0.12)* | 22.27 (0.12) |
| 65–75 | 4.13 (0.14)* | 5.43 (0.16) | 19.63 (0.12)* | 22.73 (0.12) |
| 75–80 | 14.76 (0.3)* | 20.39 (0.34) | 19.79 (0.14)* | 21.45 (0.16) |
| ≥ 80 | 15.86 (0.57)* | 21.73 (0.65) | 14.28 (0.18)* | 18.96 (0.26) |
| Body mass index (kg/m2) | ||||
| < 25 | 7.74 (0.18)* | 11.10 (0.21) | 19.27 (0.11)* | 20.58 (0.12) |
| 25–30 | 7.38 (0.19)* | 9.21 (0.21) | 23.39 (0.13)* | 24.5 (0.14) |
| 30–35 | 2.72 (0.15)* | 5.30 (0.21) | 22.91 (0.16)* | 21.42 (0.17) |
| ≥ 35 | 5.35 (0.28)* | 5.44 (0.28) | 19.53 (0.18)* | 22.78 (0.21) |
| Hyperlipidemia | 7.43 (0.13)* | 9.47 (0.14) | 20.11 (0.09)* | 20.94 (0.09) |
| Coronary artery disease | 8.55 (0.18)* | 11.39 (0.21) | 18.13 (0.12)* | 20.04 (0.11) |
| Heart failure | 11.25 (0.23)* | 12.59 (0.25) | 18.35 (0.11) | 18.22 (0.13) |
| Hypertension | 6.96 (0.11)* | 8.79 (0.13) | 21.2 (0.08) | 21.25 (0.08) |
| Diabetes | 7.73 (0.15)* | 8.25 (0.15) | 25.22 (0.11)* | 20.31 (0.1) |
| Asthma or chronic obstructive pulmonary | 11.98 (0.32)* | 17.67 (0.38) | 15.57 (0.15)* | 19.68 (0.18) |
| Dementia | 10.71 (0.46)* | 15.82 (0.56) | 15.57 (0.23)* | 14.19 (0.23) |
| Stroke | 9.15 (0.31)* | 12.95 (0.37) | 21.78 (0.15)* | 15.94 (0.19) |
Categorical variables are summarized with frequencies (percentages) unless otherwise indicated. Continuous variables are summarized as the mean (standard error) of biomarkers
*Variables indicate RL-oxygen is significantly different from physicians (p-value < 0.001)
Fig. 2A Comparison of the estimated 7-days mortality rates (y-axis) varying with the difference between the oxygen flow rate recommended by the RL optimal policy and that administered by doctors (x-axis) averaged over all time points per patient. The shaded area represents the 95% confidence interval. The smallest oxygen difference is mainly associated with the lowest 7-days mortality rates. The further away the dose received was from the suggested oxygen flow rate, the worse the outcome. B The histogram of oxygen flow rate difference between RL-oxygen and physicians (labels on the vertical axis)
Fig. 3Oxygen delivery by RL versus critical care physicians. Histogram of oxygen flow rate delivered to COVID-19 patients; blue bar indicates physician and orange bar indicates RL-oxygen