Continual updating and monitoring of clinical prediction models: time for dynamic prediction systems?

被引:63
|
作者
David A. Jenkins
Glen P. Martin
Matthew Sperrin
Richard D. Riley
Thomas P. A. Debray
Gary S. Collins
Niels Peek
机构
[1] The University of Manchester,Division of Informatics, Imaging and Data Science, Faculty of Biology, Medicine and Health
[2] Manchester Academic Health Science Centre,NIHR Greater Manchester Patient Safety Translational Research Centre
[3] The University of Manchester,Centre for Prognosis Research, School of Primary, Community and Social Care
[4] Keele University,Julius Center for Health Sciences and Primary Care, University Medical Center Utrecht
[5] Utrecht University,Centre for Statistics in Medicine, Nuffield Department of Orthopaedics, Rheumatology and Musculoskeletal Sciences
[6] University of Oxford,NIHR Manchester Biomedical Research Centre
[7] The University of Manchester,undefined
[8] Manchester Academic Health Science Centre,undefined
关键词
Clinical prediction models; Dynamic model; Validation; Model updating; Model development; Learning health system;
D O I
10.1186/s41512-020-00090-3
中图分类号
学科分类号
摘要
Clinical prediction models (CPMs) have become fundamental for risk stratification across healthcare. The CPM pipeline (development, validation, deployment, and impact assessment) is commonly viewed as a one-time activity, with model updating rarely considered and done in a somewhat ad hoc manner. This fails to address the fact that the performance of a CPM worsens over time as natural changes in populations and care pathways occur. CPMs need constant surveillance to maintain adequate predictive performance. Rather than reactively updating a developed CPM once evidence of deteriorated performance accumulates, it is possible to proactively adapt CPMs whenever new data becomes available. Approaches for validation then need to be changed accordingly, making validation a continuous rather than a discrete effort. As such, “living” (dynamic) CPMs represent a paradigm shift, where the analytical methods dynamically generate updated versions of a model through time; one then needs to validate the system rather than each subsequent model revision.
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