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Prospective, multicenter validation of the deep learning-based cardiac arrest risk management system for predicting in-hospital cardiac arrest or unplanned intensive care unit transfer in patients admitted to general wards

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Authors

Cho, Kyung-Jae; Kim, Jung Soo; Lee, Dong Hyun; Lee, Sang‑Min; Song, Myung Jin; Lim, Sung Yoon; Cho, Young-Jae; Jo, You Hwan; Shin, Yunseob; Lee, Yeon Joo

Issue Date
2023-09-05
Publisher
BMC
Citation
Critical Care,Vol.27(1):346
Keywords
Cardiac arrestIntensive care unitEarly warning scoreArtificial intelligenceDeep learningRapid response system
Abstract
Background
Retrospective studies have demonstrated that the deep learning-based cardiac arrest risk management system (DeepCARS™) is superior to the conventional methods in predicting in-hospital cardiac arrest (IHCA). This prospective study aimed to investigate the predictive accuracy of the DeepCARS™ for IHCA or unplanned intensive care unit transfer (UIT) among general ward patients, compared with that of conventional methods in real-world practice.

Methods
This prospective, multicenter cohort study was conducted at four teaching hospitals in South Korea. All adult patients admitted to general wards during the 3-month study period were included. The primary outcome was predictive accuracy for the occurrence of IHCA or UIT within 24 h of the alarm being triggered. Area under the receiver operating characteristic curve (AUROC) values were used to compare the DeepCARS™ with the modified early warning score (MEWS), national early warning Score (NEWS), and single-parameter track-and-trigger systems.

Results
Among 55,083 patients, the incidence rates of IHCA and UIT were 0.90 and 6.44 per 1,000 admissions, respectively. In terms of the composite outcome, the AUROC for the DeepCARS™ was superior to those for the MEWS and NEWS (0.869 vs. 0.756/0.767). At the same sensitivity level of the cutoff values, the mean alarm counts per day per 1,000 beds were significantly reduced for the DeepCARS™, and the rate of appropriate alarms was higher when using the DeepCARS™ than when using conventional systems.

Conclusion
The DeepCARS™ predicts IHCA and UIT more accurately and efficiently than conventional methods. Thus, the DeepCARS™ may be an effective screening tool for detecting clinical deterioration in real-world clinical practice.

Trial registration This study was registered at ClinicalTrials.gov (NCT04951973) on June 30, 2021.
ISSN
1364-8535
Language
English
URI
https://hdl.handle.net/10371/195559
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1186/s13054-023-04609-0
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