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A study of the transferability of influenza case detection systems between two large healthcare systems

Author

Listed:
  • Ye Ye
  • Michael M Wagner
  • Gregory F Cooper
  • Jeffrey P Ferraro
  • Howard Su
  • Per H Gesteland
  • Peter J Haug
  • Nicholas E Millett
  • John M Aronis
  • Andrew J Nowalk
  • Victor M Ruiz
  • Arturo López Pineda
  • Lingyun Shi
  • Rudy Van Bree
  • Thomas Ginter
  • Fuchiang Tsui

Abstract

Objectives: This study evaluates the accuracy and transferability of Bayesian case detection systems (BCD) that use clinical notes from emergency department (ED) to detect influenza cases. Methods: A BCD uses natural language processing (NLP) to infer the presence or absence of clinical findings from ED notes, which are fed into a Bayesain network classifier (BN) to infer patients’ diagnoses. We developed BCDs at the University of Pittsburgh Medical Center (BCDUPMC) and Intermountain Healthcare in Utah (BCDIH). At each site, we manually built a rule-based NLP and trained a Bayesain network classifier from over 40,000 ED encounters between Jan. 2008 and May. 2010 using feature selection, machine learning, and expert debiasing approach. Transferability of a BCD in this study may be impacted by seven factors: development (source) institution, development parser, application (target) institution, application parser, NLP transfer, BN transfer, and classification task. We employed an ANOVA analysis to study their impacts on BCD performance. Results: Both BCDs discriminated well between influenza and non-influenza on local test cases (AUCs > 0.92). When tested for transferability using the other institution’s cases, BCDUPMC discriminations declined minimally (AUC decreased from 0.95 to 0.94, p

Suggested Citation

  • Ye Ye & Michael M Wagner & Gregory F Cooper & Jeffrey P Ferraro & Howard Su & Per H Gesteland & Peter J Haug & Nicholas E Millett & John M Aronis & Andrew J Nowalk & Victor M Ruiz & Arturo López Pined, 2017. "A study of the transferability of influenza case detection systems between two large healthcare systems," PLOS ONE, Public Library of Science, vol. 12(4), pages 1-23, April.
  • Handle: RePEc:plo:pone00:0174970
    DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0174970
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