학술논문

Improved complexity stratification in congenital heart disease; the impact of including procedural data on accuracy and reliability
Document Type
article
Source
International Journal of Cardiology Congenital Heart Disease, Vol 16, Iss , Pp 100510- (2024)
Subject
Congenital heart disease
Adult congenital heart disease
Databases
Diseases of the circulatory (Cardiovascular) system
RC666-701
Language
English
ISSN
2666-6685
Abstract
Background: In order to manage a class of diseases as broad as congenital heart disease (CHD), multiple “manually generated” classification systems defining CHDs as mild, moderate and severe have been developed and used to good effect. As databases have grown, however, such “manual” complexity scoring has become infeasible. Though past attempts have been made to determine CHD complexity algorithmically using a list of diagnoses alone, missing data and lack of procedural information have been significant limitations. Methods: We built an algorithm that can stratify the complexity of patients with CHD by integrating their diagnoses with a list of their previous procedures. Specific procedures which address a missing diagnosis or imply a certain operative status were used to supplement the diagnosis list. To verify this algorithm, CHD specialists manually checked the classification of 100 children and 100 adults across four hospitals in Australia. Results: Our algorithm was 99.5% accurate in the manually checked cohort (100% in children and 99% in adults) and was able to automatically classify more than 90% of a cohort of over 24,000 CHD patients, including 92.5% of children (vs 84.4% without procedures, p