DocumentCode
74069
Title
A Physiological Time Series Dynamics-Based Approach to Patient Monitoring and Outcome Prediction
Author
Lehman, Li-wei H. ; Adams, Ryan P. ; Mayaud, Louis ; Moody, George B. ; Malhotra, Atul ; Mark, Roger G. ; Nemati, Shamim
Author_Institution
Massachusetts Inst. of Technol., Cambridge, MA, USA
Volume
19
Issue
3
fYear
2015
fDate
May-15
Firstpage
1068
Lastpage
1076
Abstract
Cardiovascular variables such as heart rate (HR) and blood pressure (BP) are regulated by an underlying control system, and therefore, the time series of these vital signs exhibit rich dynamical patterns of interaction in response to external perturbations (e.g., drug administration), as well as pathological states (e.g., onset of sepsis and hypotension). A question of interest is whether “similar” dynamical patterns can be identified across a heterogeneous patient cohort, and be used for prognosis of patients´ health and progress. In this paper, we used a switching vector autoregressive framework to systematically learn and identify a collection of vital sign time series dynamics, which are possibly recurrent within the same patient and may be shared across the entire cohort. We show that these dynamical behaviors can be used to characterize the physiological “state” of a patient. We validate our technique using simulated time series of the cardiovascular system, and human recordings of HR and BP time series from an orthostatic stress study with known postural states. Using the HR and BP dynamics of an intensive care unit (ICU) cohort of over 450 patients from the MIMIC II database, we demonstrate that the discovered cardiovascular dynamics are significantly associated with hospital mortality (dynamic modes 3 and 9, p = 0.001, p = 0.006 from logistic regression after adjusting for the APACHE scores). Combining the dynamics of BP time series and SAPS-I or APACHE-III provided a more accurate assessment of patient survival/mortality in the hospital than using SAPS-I and APACHE-III alone (p = 0.005 and p = 0.045). Our results suggest that the discovered dynamics of vital sign time series may contain additional prognostic value beyond that of the baseline acuity measures, and can potentially be used as an independent predictor of outcomes in the ICU.
Keywords
blood pressure measurement; cardiovascular system; diseases; medical control systems; medical diagnostic computing; patient monitoring; perturbation theory; regression analysis; time series; APACHE scores; APACHE-III; MIMIC II database; SAPS-I; baseline acuity measures; blood pressure; cardiovascular variables; control system; drug administration; dynamical patterns; external perturbations; heart rate; heterogeneous patient cohort; hospital mortality; human recordings; hypotension; independent predictor; intensive care unit cohort; logistic regression; orthostatic stress; outcome prediction; pathological states; patient monitoring; patient prognosis; patient survival-mortality; physiological state; physiological time series dynamics-based approach; prognostic value; sepsis; switching vector autoregressive framework; vital sign time series dynamics; Biomedical monitoring; Blood pressure; Heart rate; Heuristic algorithms; Hospitals; Switches; Time series analysis; Intensive care unit; physiological control systems; switching linear dynamical systems;
fLanguage
English
Journal_Title
Biomedical and Health Informatics, IEEE Journal of
Publisher
ieee
ISSN
2168-2194
Type
jour
DOI
10.1109/JBHI.2014.2330827
Filename
6846269
Link To Document