Abstract
BackgroundVitamin B deficiency is common worldwide and may lead to psychiatric symptoms; however, vitamin B deficiency epidemiology in patients with intense psychiatric episode has rarely been examined. Moreover, vitamin deficiency testing is costly and time-consuming, which has hampered effectively ruling out vitamin deficiency-induced intense psychiatric symptoms. In this study, we aimed to clarify the epidemiology of these deficiencies and efficiently predict them using machine-learning models from patient characteristics and routine blood test results that can be obtained within one hour.MethodsWe reviewed 497 consecutive patients, who are deemed to be at imminent risk of seriously harming themselves or others, over a period of 2 years in a single psychiatric tertiary-care center. Machine-learning models (k-nearest neighbors, logistic regression, support vector machine, and random forest) were trained to predict each deficiency from age, sex, and 29 routine blood test results gathered in the period from September 2015 to December 2016. The models were validated using a dataset collected from January 2017 through August 2017.ResultsWe found that 112 (22.5%), 80 (16.1%), and 72 (14.5%) patients had vitamin B1, vitamin B12, and folate (vitamin B9) deficiency, respectively. Further, the machine-learning models were well generalized to predict deficiency in the future unseen data, especially using random forest; areas under the receiver operating characteristic curves for the validation dataset (i.e., the dataset not used for training the models) were 0.716, 0.599, and 0.796, respectively. The Gini importance of these vitamins provided further evidence of a relationship between these vitamins and the complete blood count, while also indicating a hitherto rarely considered, potential association between these vitamins and alkaline phosphatase (ALP) or thyroid stimulating hormone (TSH).DiscussionThis study demonstrates that machine-learning can efficiently predict some vitamin deficiencies in patients with active psychiatric symptoms, based on the largest cohort to date with intense psychiatric episode. The prediction method may expedite risk stratification and clinical decision-making regarding whether replacement therapy should be prescribed. Further research includes validating its external generalizability in other clinical situations and clarify whether interventions based on this method could improve patient care and cost-effectiveness.
Highlights
Vitamin B deficiency is common worldwide and may lead to psychiatric symptoms [1,2,3,4]
The results provided further evidence of a relationship between the vitamin B levels and complete blood count while indicating the hitherto rarely considered, potential association between these vitamins and alkaline phosphatase (ALP) or thyroid stimulating hormone (TSH)
Based on the largest cohort to date of patients at imminent risk of seriously harming themselves or others, this study indicated that deficiency of certain vitamins can be predicted in an efficient manner via machine-learning using routine blood test results
Summary
Vitamin B deficiency is common worldwide and may lead to psychiatric symptoms [1,2,3,4]. The epidemiology of vitamin B deficiency in patients with active mental symptoms requiring immediate hospitalization has rarely been examined. Vitamin B deficiency is common worldwide and may lead to psychiatric symptoms; vitamin B deficiency epidemiology in patients with intense psychiatric episode has rarely been examined. Vitamin deficiency testing is costly and time-consuming, which has hampered effectively ruling out vitamin deficiencyinduced intense psychiatric symptoms. We aimed to clarify the epidemiology of these deficiencies and efficiently predict them using machine-learning models from patient characteristics and routine blood test results that can be obtained within one hour
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