论文标题
用于医疗保健应用的综合多模式人工智能框架
Integrated multimodal artificial intelligence framework for healthcare applications
论文作者
论文摘要
人工智能(AI)系统在接下来的几十年中有很大的希望可以改善医疗保健。具体而言,利用多个数据源和输入方式的AI系统有望成为一种可行的方法,可以在广泛的应用程序中提供更准确的结果和可部署的管道。在这项工作中,我们建议并评估一个统一的医学(HAIM)框架整体AI,以促进利用多模式输入的AI系统的生成和测试。我们的方法使用可通用的数据预处理和机器学习建模阶段,可以很容易地适应医疗保健环境中的研究和部署。 We evaluate our HAIM framework by training and characterizing 14,324 independent models based on HAIM-MIMIC-MM, a multimodal clinical database (N=34,537 samples) containing 7,279 unique hospitalizations and 6,485 patients, spanning all possible input combinations of 4 data modalities (i.e., tabular, time-series, text, and images), 11 unique data sources and 12 predictive tasks.我们表明,该框架可以始终如一地生产出在各种医疗保健示范中胜过相似的单源方法的模型(乘以6-33%),其中包括10种不同的胸部病理诊断,以及休息时间和48小时的死亡率预测。我们还使用Shapley值量化了每种模式和数据源的贡献,这证明了数据模式重要性的异质性以及在不同医疗保健的任务中的多模式输入的必要性。我们的整体医学AI(HAIM)框架的可推广性能和灵活性可以为未来的临床和运营医疗环境中的多模式预测系统提供有希望的途径。
Artificial intelligence (AI) systems hold great promise to improve healthcare over the next decades. Specifically, AI systems leveraging multiple data sources and input modalities are poised to become a viable method to deliver more accurate results and deployable pipelines across a wide range of applications. In this work, we propose and evaluate a unified Holistic AI in Medicine (HAIM) framework to facilitate the generation and testing of AI systems that leverage multimodal inputs. Our approach uses generalizable data pre-processing and machine learning modeling stages that can be readily adapted for research and deployment in healthcare environments. We evaluate our HAIM framework by training and characterizing 14,324 independent models based on HAIM-MIMIC-MM, a multimodal clinical database (N=34,537 samples) containing 7,279 unique hospitalizations and 6,485 patients, spanning all possible input combinations of 4 data modalities (i.e., tabular, time-series, text, and images), 11 unique data sources and 12 predictive tasks. We show that this framework can consistently and robustly produce models that outperform similar single-source approaches across various healthcare demonstrations (by 6-33%), including 10 distinct chest pathology diagnoses, along with length-of-stay and 48-hour mortality predictions. We also quantify the contribution of each modality and data source using Shapley values, which demonstrates the heterogeneity in data modality importance and the necessity of multimodal inputs across different healthcare-relevant tasks. The generalizable properties and flexibility of our Holistic AI in Medicine (HAIM) framework could offer a promising pathway for future multimodal predictive systems in clinical and operational healthcare settings.