Limitations of Retrospective Machine Learning Models for Predicting Tracheostomy After Cardiac Surgery
Felix Wiesmueller, Johannes Rösch, Stephan Kersting, Thomas Strecker

TL;DR
This study shows that models using past patient data are not reliable for predicting tracheostomy after heart surgery.
Contribution
The study reveals that both existing and new machine learning models have poor accuracy when using retrospective data for tracheostomy prediction.
Findings
The existing model had an AUC of 0.57, indicating poor discrimination.
Newly developed machine learning models also showed poor diagnostic performance.
Prospective data collection and physiological or imaging-based diagnostics may improve predictions.
Abstract
Background/Objectives: Early tracheostomy seems favorable in prolonged ventilated patients after surgery. Hence, predicting tracheostomy after cardiac surgery is essential. Recently proposed prediction models aim to support this decision-making process, but their diagnostic validity across other patient populations remains uncertain. Methods: A retrospective single-center study was performed at a university hospital. The patient sample included consecutive patients between 2010 and 2020 who underwent cardiac surgery. Patients who underwent tracheostomy after cardiac surgery were assigned to the intervention group. Control group patients, who had not undergone tracheostomy, were randomly assigned to the group. An existing model was evaluated by receiver operating characteristics curve analysis. Four sets of risk features were chosen depending on results from regression analysis, lasso…
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Taxonomy
TopicsTracheal and airway disorders · Nosocomial Infections in ICU · Phonocardiography and Auscultation Techniques
