Abstract

BackgroundAcute kidney injury (AKI) in pediatric critical care patients is diagnosed using elevated serum creatinine, which occurs only after kidney impairment. There are no treatments other than supportive care for AKI once it has developed, so it is important to identify patients at risk to prevent injury. This study develops a machine learning model to learn pre-disease patterns of physiological measurements and predict pediatric AKI up to 48 h earlier than the currently established diagnostic guidelines.MethodsEHR data from 16,863 pediatric critical care patients between 1 month to 21 years of age from three independent institutions were used to develop a single machine learning model for early prediction of creatinine-based AKI using intelligently engineered predictors, such as creatinine rate of change, to automatically assess real-time AKI risk. The primary outcome is prediction of moderate to severe AKI (Stage 2/3), and secondary outcomes are prediction of any AKI (Stage 1/2/3) and requirement of renal replacement therapy (RRT). Predictions generate alerts allowing fast assessment and reduction of AKI risk, such as: “patient has 90% risk of developing AKI in the next 48 h” along with contextual information and suggested response such as “patient on aminoglycosides, suggest check level and review dose and indication”.ResultsThe model was successful in predicting Stage 2/3 AKI prior to detection by conventional criteria with a median lead-time of 30 h at AUROC of 0.89. The model predicted 70% of subsequent RRT episodes, 58% of Stage 2/3 episodes, and 41% of any AKI episodes. The ratio of false to true alerts of any AKI episodes was approximately one-to-one (PPV 47%). Among patients predicted, 79% received potentially nephrotoxic medication after being identified by the model but before development of AKI.ConclusionsAs the first multi-center validated AKI prediction model for all pediatric critical care patients, the machine learning model described in this study accurately predicts moderate to severe AKI up to 48 h in advance of AKI onset. The model may improve outcome of pediatric AKI by providing early alerting and actionable feedback, potentially preventing or reducing AKI by implementing early measures such as medication adjustment.

Highlights

  • Acute kidney injury (AKI) in pediatric critical care patients is diagnosed using elevated serum creati‐ nine, which occurs only after kidney impairment

  • Whilst in pediatric intensive care units (PICU) there are often no specific treatments to reverse AKI after it has developed [6], some studies have shown that early improvements in renal function after AKI may lead to better outcomes [1, 5, 7]

  • While AKI is multifactorial in PICU patients, it most commonly occurs following a period of renal hypoperfusion due to hypotension

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Summary

Introduction

Acute kidney injury (AKI) in pediatric critical care patients is diagnosed using elevated serum creati‐ nine, which occurs only after kidney impairment. This study aims to develop a prediction model of AKI for general pediatric critical care patients, running in real-time, that can detect subtle ongoing changes in patient physiology and alert caregivers about patients at high risk of AKI and provide interpretable context and suggested actions. The same model is assessed on secondary AKI-related outcome measures, including development of any AKI (Stage 1/2/3) and requirement of renal replacement therapy (RRT). To our knowledge, this is the first AKI prediction model built to explain each prediction, and the first multi-center validated model for general pediatric critical care AKI prediction

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