Leveraging Natural Language Processing to Improve Electronic Health Record Suicide Risk Prediction for Veterans Health Administration Users.

Journal: The Journal of clinical psychiatry
PMID:

Abstract

Suicide risk prediction models frequently rely on structured electronic health record (EHR) data, including patient demographics and health care usage variables. Unstructured EHR data, such as clinical notes, may improve predictive accuracy by allowing access to detailed information that does not exist in structured data fields. To assess comparative benefits of including unstructured data, we developed a large case-control dataset matched on a state-of-the-art structured EHR suicide risk algorithm, utilized natural language processing (NLP) to derive a clinical note predictive model, and evaluated to what extent this model provided predictive accuracy over and above existing predictive thresholds. We developed a matched case-control sample of Veterans Health Administration (VHA) patients in 2017 and 2018. Each case (all patients that died by suicide in that interval, n = 4,584) was matched with 5 controls (patients who remained alive during treatment year) who shared the same suicide risk percentile. All sample EHR notes were selected and abstracted using NLP methods. We applied machine-learning classification algorithms to NLP output to develop predictive models. We calculated area under the curve (AUC) and suicide risk concentration to evaluate predictive accuracy overall and for high-risk patients. The best performing NLP-derived models provided 19% overall additional predictive accuracy (AUC = 0.69; 95% CI, 0.67, 0.72) and 6-fold additional risk concentration for patients at the highest risk tier (top 0.1%), relative to the structured EHR model. The NLP-supplemented predictive models provided considerable benefit when compared to conventional structured EHR models. Results support future structured and unstructured EHR risk model integrations.

Authors

  • Maxwell Levis
    White River Junction VA Medical Center, White River Junction, VT, USA.
  • Joshua Levy
    Department of Pathology & Laboratory Medicine, Cedars-Sinai Medical Center, Los Angeles, California.
  • Kallisse R Dent
    VA Serious Mental Illness Treatment Resource and Evaluation Center, Ann Arbor, Michigan.
  • Vincent Dufort
    VAMC White River Junction, White River Junction, Vermont.
  • Glenn T Gobbel
    Department of Biomedical Informatics, Vanderbilt University, Nashville, TN, USA.
  • Bradley V Watts
    Geisel School of Medicine at Dartmouth, Hanover, NH, USA.
  • Brian Shiner
    White River Junction VA Medical Center, White River Junction, VT, USA.