Administrative Data Is Insufficient to Identify Near-Future Critical Illness: A Population-Based Retrospective Cohort Study

Prediction of future critical illness could render it practical to test interventions seeking to avoid or delay the coming event. Identify adults having >33% probability of near-future critical illness. Retrospective cohort study, 2013-2015. Community-dwelling residents of Manitoba, Canada, aged...

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Published inFrontiers in Epidemiology (Online) Vol. 2; p. 944216
Main Authors Garland, Allan, Marrie, Ruth Ann, Wunsch, Hannah, Yogendran, Marina, Chateau, Daniel
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published Switzerland Frontiers Media S.A 25.07.2022
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ISSN2674-1199
2674-1199
DOI10.3389/fepid.2022.944216

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Summary:Prediction of future critical illness could render it practical to test interventions seeking to avoid or delay the coming event. Identify adults having >33% probability of near-future critical illness. Retrospective cohort study, 2013-2015. Community-dwelling residents of Manitoba, Canada, aged 40-89 years. The outcome was a near-future critical illness, defined as intensive care unit admission with invasive mechanical ventilation, or non-palliative death occurring 30-180 days after 1 April each year. By dividing the data into training and test cohorts, a Classification and Regression Tree analysis was used to identify subgroups with ≥33% probability of the outcome. We considered 72 predictors including sociodemographics, chronic conditions, frailty, and health care utilization. Sensitivity analysis used logistic regression methods. Approximately 0.38% of each yearly cohort experienced near-future critical illness. The optimal Tree identified 2,644 mutually exclusive subgroups. Socioeconomic status was the most influential variable, followed by nursing home residency and frailty; age was sixth. In the training data, the model performed well; 41 subgroups containing 493 subjects had ≥33% members who developed the outcome. However, in the test data, those subgroups contained 429 individuals, with 20 (4.7%) experiencing the outcome, which comprised 0.98% of all subjects with the outcome. While logistic regression showed less model overfitting, it likewise failed to achieve the stated objective. High-fidelity prediction of near-future critical illness among community-dwelling adults was not successful using population-based administrative data. Additional research is needed to ascertain whether the inclusion of additional types of data can achieve this goal.
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Edited by: Ciro Martins Gomes, University of Brazilia, Brazil
Reviewed by: Camilla Wiuff, Statens Serum Institut (SSI), Denmark; Daniel Holanda Barroso, University of Brazilia, Brazil; Henry Maia Peixoto, University of Brazilia, Brazil
This article was submitted to Clinical Epidemiology, a section of the journal Frontiers in Epidemiology
ISSN:2674-1199
2674-1199
DOI:10.3389/fepid.2022.944216