• Pol. Arch. Med. Wewn. · Mar 2024

    Predicting acute kidney injury onset using a random forest algorithm using electronic medical records of COVID-19 patients: the CRACoV-AKI model.

    • Katarzyna Krzanowska, Krzysztof Batko, Karolina Niezabitowska, Katarzyna Woźnica, Tomasz Grodzicki, Maciej Małecki, Monika Bociąga-Jasik, Marek Rajzer, Krzysztof Sładek, Barbara Wizner, Przemysław Biecek, and Marcin Krzanowski.
    • Pol. Arch. Med. Wewn. 2024 Mar 14.

    IntroductionAcute kidney injury (AKI) is a serious and common complication of SARS-CoV-2 infection. Most risk assessment tools for AKI have been developed in the intensive care unit or elderly population. As the COVID-19 pandemic is transitioning into an endemic state, there is an unmet need for prognostic scores tailored to this population.ObjectivesDevelopment of a robust predictive model for the occurrence of AKI in hospitalized patients with COVID-19.Patients And MethodsElectronic medical records of all adult inpatients admitted between March 2020 and January 2022 were extracted from a large, tertiary care center with reference status in Lesser Poland. We screened 5806 patients with SARS-CoV-2 infection confirmed with polymerase chain reaction test. After excluding subjects with absent serum creatinine values or mild disease course (less than 7 days of inpatient care), 4630 patients were recruited. Data was randomly split into a training (N = 3462) and test (N = 1168) cohort. A random forest model was tuned with feature engineering based on expert advice and metrics evaluated in nested cross-validation to reduce bias.ResultsNested cross-validation yielded an AUC (area under the curve) with a range of 0.793-0.807 and an average performance of 0.798. Model explanation techniques from a global perspective suggest respiratory support, chronic kidney disease and procalcitonin are among the most important variables in permutation tests.ConclusionsThe CRACoV-AKI model enables AKI risk stratification among hospitalized patients with COVID-19. Machine learning-based tools may thus offer additional decision-making support for specialist providers.

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