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Detecting clinically meaningful biomarkers with repeated measurements in an Electronic Health Record

Published 8 Jul 2014 in stat.AP | (1407.2239v1)

Abstract: Electronic health record (EHR) data are becoming an increasingly common data source for understanding clinical risk of acute events. While their longitudinal nature presents opportunities to observe changing risk over time, these analyses are complicated by the sparse and irregular measurements of many of the clinical metrics making typical statistical methods unsuitable for these data. In this paper, we present an analytic procedure to both sample from an EHR and analyze the data to detect clinically meaningful markers of acute myocardial infarction (MI). Using an EHR from a large national dialysis organization we abstracted the records of 64,318 individuals and identified 5,314 people that had an MI during the study period. We describe a nested case-control design to sample appropriate controls and an analytic approach using regression splines. Fitting a mixed-model with truncated power splines we perform a series of goodness-of-fit tests to determine whether any of 11 regularly collected laboratory markers are useful clinical predictors. We test the clinical utility of each marker using an independent test set. The results suggest that EHR data can be easily used to detect markers of clinically acute events. Special software or analytic tools are not needed, even with irregular EHR data.

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