Author :
Dias, Claudia Camila ; Granja, Cristina ; Costa-Pereira, Altamiro ; Gama, Joao ; Pereira Rodrigues, Pedro
Author_Institution :
CINTESIS, Univ. of Porto, Porto, Portugal
Abstract :
Health-related quality of life (HR-QoL) is a subjective concept, reflecting the overall mental and physical state of the patient, and their own sense of well-being. Estimating current and future QoL has become a major outcome in the evaluation of critically ill patients. The aim of this study is to enhance the inference process of 6 weeks and 6 months prognosis of QoL after intensive care unit (ICU) stay, using the EQ-5D questionnaire. The main outcomes of the study were the EQ-5D five main dimensions: mobility, self-care, usual activities, pain and anxiety depression. For each outcome, three Bayesian classifiers were built and validated with 10-fold cross-validation. Sixty and 473 patients (6 weeks and 6 months, respectively) were included. Overall, 6 months QoL is higher than 6 weeks, with the probability of absence of problems ranging from 31% (6 weeks mobility) to 72% (6 months self-care). Bayesian models achieved prognosis accuracies of 56% (6 months, anxiety depression) up to 80% (6 weeks, mobility). The prognosis inference process for an individual patient was enhanced with the visual analysis of the models, showing that women, elderly, or people with longer ICU stay have higher risk of QoL problems at 6 weeks. Likewise, for the 6 months prognosis, a higher APACHE II severity score also leads to a higher risk of problems, except for anxiety depression where the youngest and active have increased risk. Bayesian networks are competitive with less descriptive strategies, improve the inference process by incorporating domain knowledge and present a more interpretable model. The relationships among different factors extracted by the Bayesian models are in accordance with those collected by previous state-of-the-art literature, hence showing their usability as inference model.
Keywords :
assisted living; belief networks; inference mechanisms; medical computing; pattern classification; uncertainty handling; 10-fold cross-validation; APACHE II severity score; Bayesian classifiers; Bayesian models; Bayesian networks; EQ-5D questionnaire; HR-QoL prognosis; ICU; adult survivors; anxiety; critical illness; critically ill patient evaluation; depression; health-related quality of life; inference process improvement; intensive care unit; mobility; pain; patient mental state; patient physical state; probabilistic graphical models; prognosis inference process; self-care; usual activities; visual analysis; Accuracy; Bayes methods; Medical diagnostic imaging; Pain; Prognostics and health management; Surgery; Bayesian networks; EQ-5D; critically ill patients; intensive care; quality of life;