Abstract

Recent advances in natural language processing models are expected to provide diagnostic assistance in psychiatry from history of present illness (HPI). However, existing studies have been limited, with the target diseases including only major diseases, small sample sizes, or no comparison with diagnoses made by psychiatrists to ensure accuracy. Therefore, we formulated an accurate diagnostic model that covers all psychiatric disorders. HPIs and diagnoses were extracted from discharge summaries of 2642 cases at the Nara Medical University Hospital, Japan, from May 21, 2007, to May 31, 2021. The diagnoses were classified into 11 classes according to the code from ICD-10 Chapter V. Using UTH-BERT pre-trained on the electronic medical records of the University of Tokyo Hospital, Japan, we predicted the main diagnoses at discharge based on HPIs and compared the concordance rate with the results of psychiatrists. The psychiatrists were divided into two groups: semi-Designated with 3-4 years of experience and Residents with only 2 months of experience. The model's match rate was 74.3%, compared to 71.5% for the semi-Designated psychiatrists and 69.4% for the Residents. If the cases were limited to those correctly answered by the semi-Designated group, the model and the Residents performed at 84.9% and 83.3%, respectively. We demonstrated that the model matched the diagnosis predicted from the HPI with a high probability to the principal diagnosis at discharge. Hence, the model can provide diagnostic suggestions in actual clinical practice. This article is protected by copyright. All rights reserved.

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