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Integrated multimodal artificial intelligence framework for healthcare applications

Luis R. SoenksenAbdul Latif Jameel Clinic for Machine Learning in Health, MIT, Cambridge, MA, 02139, USAYu MaOperations Research Center, Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT), Cambridge, MA, 02139, USACynthia ZengOperations Research Center, Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT), Cambridge, MA, 02139, USALéonard BoussiouxOperations Research Center, Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT), Cambridge, MA, 02139, USAKimberly Villalobos CarballoOperations Research Center, Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT), Cambridge, MA, 02139, USALiangyuan NaOperations Research Center, Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT), Cambridge, MA, 02139, USAHolly WibergOperations Research Center, Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT), Cambridge, MA, 02139, USAMichael Lingzhi LiOperations Research Center, Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT), Cambridge, MA, 02139, USAIgnacio FuentesAbdul Latif Jameel Clinic for Machine Learning in Health, MIT, Cambridge, MA, 02139, USADimitris BertsimasAbdul Latif Jameel Clinic for Machine Learning in Health, MIT, Cambridge, MA, 02139, USA. [email protected]
2022en
ABI

Аннотация

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 7279 unique hospitalizations and 6485 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 h 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.

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