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Predicting Long-Term Mortality in Patients With Acute Heart Failure by Using Machine Learning

Cited 6 time in Web of Science Cited 7 time in Scopus
Authors

PARK, JIESUCK; HWANG, IN-CHANG; YOON, YEONYEE E.; PARK, JUN-BEAN; PARK, JAE-HYEONG; CHO, GOO-YEONG

Issue Date
2022-07
Publisher
Elsevier B.V.
Citation
Journal of Cardiac Failure, Vol.28 No.7, pp.1078-1087
Abstract
© 2022 Elsevier Inc.Background: High mortality rates in patients with acute heart failure (AHF) necessitate proper risk stratification. However, risk-assessment tools for long-term mortality are largely lacking. We aimed to develop a machine-learning (ML)-based risk-prediction model for long-term all-cause mortality in patients admitted for AHF. Methods and Results: The ML model, based on boosted a Cox regression algorithm (CoxBoost), was trained with 2704 consecutive patients hospitalized for AHF (median age 73 years, 55% male, and median left ventricular ejection fraction 38%). We selected 27 input variables, including 19 clinical features and 8 echocardiographic parameters, for model development. The best-performing model, along with pre-existing risk scores (BIOSTAT-CHF and AHEAD scores), was validated in an independent test cohort of 1608 patients. During the median 32 months (interquartile range 12–54 months) of the follow-up period, 1050 (38.8%) and 690 (42.9%) deaths occurred in the training and test cohorts, respectively. The area under the receiver operating characteristic curve (AUROC) of the ML model for all-cause mortality at 3 years was 0.761 (95% CI: 0.754–0.767) in the training cohort and 0.760 (95% CI: 0.752–0.768) in the test cohort. The discrimination performance of the ML model significantly outperformed those of the pre-existing risk scores (AUROC 0.714, 95% CI 0.706–0.722 by BIOSTAT-CHF; and 0.681, 95% CI 0.672–0.689 by AHEAD). Risk stratification based on the ML model identified patients at high mortality risk regardless of heart failure phenotypes. Conclusions: The ML-based mortality-prediction model can predict long-term mortality accurately, leading to optimal risk stratification of patients with AHF.
ISSN
1071-9164
URI
https://hdl.handle.net/10371/184728
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.cardfail.2022.02.012
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