A real-time prognostic model for venous thromboembolic events among hospitalized adults

Hospital-acquired venous thromboembolism (HA-VTE) is a leading cause of morbidity and mortality among hospitalized adults. Guidelines recommend use of a risk-prediction model to estimate HA-VTE risk for individual patients. Extant models do not perform well for broad patient populations and are not...

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Veröffentlicht in:Research and practice in thrombosis and haemostasis 2024-05, Vol.8 (4), p.102433-102433, Article 102433
Hauptverfasser: Tillman, Benjamin F., Domenico, Henry J., Moore, Ryan P., Byrne, Daniel W., Morton, Colleen T., Mixon, Amanda S., French, Benjamin
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container_issue 4
container_start_page 102433
container_title Research and practice in thrombosis and haemostasis
container_volume 8
creator Tillman, Benjamin F.
Domenico, Henry J.
Moore, Ryan P.
Byrne, Daniel W.
Morton, Colleen T.
Mixon, Amanda S.
French, Benjamin
description Hospital-acquired venous thromboembolism (HA-VTE) is a leading cause of morbidity and mortality among hospitalized adults. Guidelines recommend use of a risk-prediction model to estimate HA-VTE risk for individual patients. Extant models do not perform well for broad patient populations and are not conducive to automation in clinical practice. To develop an automated, real-time prognostic model for venous thromboembolism during hospitalization among all adult inpatients using readily available data from the electronic health record. The derivation cohort included inpatient hospitalizations (“encounters”) for patients ≥16 years old at Vanderbilt University Medical Center between 2018 and 2020 (n = 132,330). HA-VTE events were identified using International Classification of Diseases, 10th Revision, codes. The prognostic model was developed using least absolute shrinkage and selection operator regression. Temporal external validation was performed in a validation cohort of encounters between 2021 and 2022 (n = 62,546). Prediction performance was assessed by discrimination accuracy (C statistic) and calibration (integrated calibration index). There were 1187 HA-VTEs in the derivation cohort (9.0 per 1000 encounters) and 864 in the validation cohort (13.8 per 1000 encounters). The prognostic model included 25 variables, with placement of a central line among the most important predictors. Prediction performance of the model was excellent (C statistic, 0.891; 95% CI, 0.882-0.900; integrated calibration index, 0.001). The model performed similarly well across subgroups of patients defined by age, sex, race, and type of admission. This fully automated prognostic model uses readily available data from the electronic health record, exhibits superior prediction performance compared with existing models, and generates granular risk stratification in the form of a predicted probability of HA-VTE for each patient. •We developed a prognostic model for hospital-acquired venous thromboembolism among adults.•The model uses data readily available in the electronic health record.•The model exhibited excellent prediction performance across a wide range of patient subgroups.•The prognostic model can be automated for real-time risk assessment for venous thromboembolism.
doi_str_mv 10.1016/j.rpth.2024.102433
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subjects inpatients
Original
prognosis
risk
safety
venous thromboembolism
title A real-time prognostic model for venous thromboembolic events among hospitalized adults
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