Improving Prehospital Stroke Diagnosis Using Natural Language Processing of Paramedic Reports

被引:17
|
作者
Mayampurath, Anoop [1 ]
Parnianpour, Zahra [2 ]
Richards, Christopher T. [3 ]
Meurer, William J. [4 ]
Lee, Jungwha [5 ]
Ankenman, Bruce [6 ]
Perry, Ohad [6 ]
Mendelson, Scott J. [2 ]
Holl, Jane L. [2 ]
Prabhakaran, Shyam [2 ]
机构
[1] Univ Chicago, Dept Pediat, Chicago, IL 60637 USA
[2] Univ Chicago, Dept Neurol, 5841 S Maryland Ave, Chicago, IL 60637 USA
[3] Univ Cincinnati, Dept Emergency Med, Cincinnati, OH USA
[4] Univ Michigan, Dept Emergency Med, Ann Arbor, MI USA
[5] Northwestern Univ, Dept Prevent Med, Feinberg Sch Med, Chicago, IL USA
[6] Northwestern Univ, Dept Ind Engn & Management Studies, Chicago, IL USA
基金
美国医疗保健研究与质量局;
关键词
diagnosis; machine learning; natural language processing; patient; retrospective studies; SCALES;
D O I
10.1161/STROKEAHA.120.033580
中图分类号
R74 [神经病学与精神病学];
学科分类号
摘要
Background and Purpose: Accurate prehospital diagnosis of stroke by emergency medical services (EMS) can increase treatments rates, mitigate disability, and reduce stroke deaths. We aimed to develop a model that utilizes natural language processing of EMS reports and machine learning to improve prehospital stroke identification. Methods: We conducted a retrospective study of patients transported by the Chicago EMS to 17 regional primary and comprehensive stroke centers. Patients who were suspected of stroke by the EMS or had hospital-diagnosed stroke were included in our cohort. Text within EMS reports were converted to unigram features, which were given as input to a support-vector machine classifier that was trained on 70% of the cohort and tested on the remaining 30%. Outcomes included final diagnosis of stroke versus nonstroke, large vessel occlusion, severe stroke (National Institutes of Health Stroke Scale score >5), and comprehensive stroke center-eligible stroke (large vessel occlusion or hemorrhagic stroke). Results: Of 965 patients, 580 (60%) had confirmed acute stroke. In a test set of 289 patients, the text-based model predicted stroke nominally better than models based on the Cincinnati Prehospital Stroke Scale (c-statistic: 0.73 versus 0.67, P=0.165) and was superior to the 3-Item Stroke Scale (c-statistic: 0.73 versus 0.53, P<0.001) scores. Improvements in discrimination were also observed for the other outcomes. Conclusions: We derived a model that utilizes clinical text from paramedic reports to identify stroke. Our results require validation but have the potential of improving prehospital routing protocols.
引用
收藏
页码:2676 / 2679
页数:4
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