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Albumin level and patient age predict outcomes in patients referred for gastrostomy insertion: internal and external validation of a gastrostomy score and comparison with artificial neural networks

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Albumin level and patient age predict outcomes in patients referred for gastrostomy insertion: internal and external validation of a gastrostomy score and comparison with artificial neural networks. / Leeds, John; McAlindon, Mark E.; Grant, Julia et al.
In: Gastrointestinal Endoscopy, Vol. 74, No. 5, 11.2011, p. 1033-1039.

Research output: Contribution to Journal/MagazineJournal articlepeer-review

Harvard

Leeds, J, McAlindon, ME, Grant, J, Robson, HE, Morley, SR, James, G, Hoeroldt, B, Kapur, K, Dear, K, Hensman, J, Worden, K & Sanders, DS 2011, 'Albumin level and patient age predict outcomes in patients referred for gastrostomy insertion: internal and external validation of a gastrostomy score and comparison with artificial neural networks', Gastrointestinal Endoscopy, vol. 74, no. 5, pp. 1033-1039. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.gie.2011.07.043

APA

Leeds, J., McAlindon, M. E., Grant, J., Robson, H. E., Morley, S. R., James, G., Hoeroldt, B., Kapur, K., Dear, K., Hensman, J., Worden, K., & Sanders, D. S. (2011). Albumin level and patient age predict outcomes in patients referred for gastrostomy insertion: internal and external validation of a gastrostomy score and comparison with artificial neural networks. Gastrointestinal Endoscopy, 74(5), 1033-1039. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.gie.2011.07.043

Vancouver

Leeds J, McAlindon ME, Grant J, Robson HE, Morley SR, James G et al. Albumin level and patient age predict outcomes in patients referred for gastrostomy insertion: internal and external validation of a gastrostomy score and comparison with artificial neural networks. Gastrointestinal Endoscopy. 2011 Nov;74(5):1033-1039. Epub 2011 Oct 25. doi: 10.1016/j.gie.2011.07.043

Author

Bibtex

@article{a6d4ce1aaf834e30b22b19e96e9b130b,
title = "Albumin level and patient age predict outcomes in patients referred for gastrostomy insertion: internal and external validation of a gastrostomy score and comparison with artificial neural networks",
abstract = "Background: Significant mortality after gastrostomy insertion remains and some risk factors have been identified, but no predictive scoring system exists. Objective: To identify risk factors for mortality, formulate a predictive scoring system, and validate the score. Comparison to an artificial neural network (ANN). Design: Endoscopic database analysis. Setting: Six hospitals (2 teaching hospitals) in the South Yorkshire region, United Kingdom. Patients: This study involved all patients referred for gastrostomy insertion. Intervention: Generation of clinical scores to predict 30-day mortality in patients undergoing gastrostomy insertion. Main Outcome Measurements: Risk factors for 30-day mortality. Internal and external validation of the score. Comparison with an ANN. Results: Univariate analysis showed that 30-day mortality was associated with age, albumin levels, and cardiac and neurological comorbidities. Multivariate analysis showed that only age and albumin levels were independent. Modeling provided scores of 0, 1, 2, and 3 corresponding to 30-day mortalities of 0% (0-2.1), 7% (2.9-13.9), 21.3% (13.5-30.9), and 37.3% (24.1-51.9), respectively. Application of the scoring system at the other teaching hospital and the 4 district general hospitals gave 30-day mortality rates that were not significantly different from those predicted. Receiver operating characteristic curves for the score and the ANN were comparable. Limitations: Nonrandomized study. Score not used as a decision-making tool. Conclusion: The gastrostomy score provides an estimate of 30-day mortality for patients (and their relatives) when gastrostomy insertion is being discussed. This score requires evaluation as a decision-making tool in clinical practice. ANN analysis results were similar to the outcomes from the clinical score.",
keywords = "ANN, artificial neural network, MLP, multi-layer perceptron",
author = "John Leeds and McAlindon, {Mark E.} and Julia Grant and Robson, {Helen E.} and Morley, {Stephen R.} and Gary James and Barbara Hoeroldt and Kapil Kapur and Keith Dear and James Hensman and Keith Worden and Sanders, {David S.}",
year = "2011",
month = nov,
doi = "10.1016/j.gie.2011.07.043",
language = "English",
volume = "74",
pages = "1033--1039",
journal = "Gastrointestinal Endoscopy",
issn = "0016-5107",
publisher = "Mosby Inc.",
number = "5",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Albumin level and patient age predict outcomes in patients referred for gastrostomy insertion

T2 - internal and external validation of a gastrostomy score and comparison with artificial neural networks

AU - Leeds, John

AU - McAlindon, Mark E.

AU - Grant, Julia

AU - Robson, Helen E.

AU - Morley, Stephen R.

AU - James, Gary

AU - Hoeroldt, Barbara

AU - Kapur, Kapil

AU - Dear, Keith

AU - Hensman, James

AU - Worden, Keith

AU - Sanders, David S.

PY - 2011/11

Y1 - 2011/11

N2 - Background: Significant mortality after gastrostomy insertion remains and some risk factors have been identified, but no predictive scoring system exists. Objective: To identify risk factors for mortality, formulate a predictive scoring system, and validate the score. Comparison to an artificial neural network (ANN). Design: Endoscopic database analysis. Setting: Six hospitals (2 teaching hospitals) in the South Yorkshire region, United Kingdom. Patients: This study involved all patients referred for gastrostomy insertion. Intervention: Generation of clinical scores to predict 30-day mortality in patients undergoing gastrostomy insertion. Main Outcome Measurements: Risk factors for 30-day mortality. Internal and external validation of the score. Comparison with an ANN. Results: Univariate analysis showed that 30-day mortality was associated with age, albumin levels, and cardiac and neurological comorbidities. Multivariate analysis showed that only age and albumin levels were independent. Modeling provided scores of 0, 1, 2, and 3 corresponding to 30-day mortalities of 0% (0-2.1), 7% (2.9-13.9), 21.3% (13.5-30.9), and 37.3% (24.1-51.9), respectively. Application of the scoring system at the other teaching hospital and the 4 district general hospitals gave 30-day mortality rates that were not significantly different from those predicted. Receiver operating characteristic curves for the score and the ANN were comparable. Limitations: Nonrandomized study. Score not used as a decision-making tool. Conclusion: The gastrostomy score provides an estimate of 30-day mortality for patients (and their relatives) when gastrostomy insertion is being discussed. This score requires evaluation as a decision-making tool in clinical practice. ANN analysis results were similar to the outcomes from the clinical score.

AB - Background: Significant mortality after gastrostomy insertion remains and some risk factors have been identified, but no predictive scoring system exists. Objective: To identify risk factors for mortality, formulate a predictive scoring system, and validate the score. Comparison to an artificial neural network (ANN). Design: Endoscopic database analysis. Setting: Six hospitals (2 teaching hospitals) in the South Yorkshire region, United Kingdom. Patients: This study involved all patients referred for gastrostomy insertion. Intervention: Generation of clinical scores to predict 30-day mortality in patients undergoing gastrostomy insertion. Main Outcome Measurements: Risk factors for 30-day mortality. Internal and external validation of the score. Comparison with an ANN. Results: Univariate analysis showed that 30-day mortality was associated with age, albumin levels, and cardiac and neurological comorbidities. Multivariate analysis showed that only age and albumin levels were independent. Modeling provided scores of 0, 1, 2, and 3 corresponding to 30-day mortalities of 0% (0-2.1), 7% (2.9-13.9), 21.3% (13.5-30.9), and 37.3% (24.1-51.9), respectively. Application of the scoring system at the other teaching hospital and the 4 district general hospitals gave 30-day mortality rates that were not significantly different from those predicted. Receiver operating characteristic curves for the score and the ANN were comparable. Limitations: Nonrandomized study. Score not used as a decision-making tool. Conclusion: The gastrostomy score provides an estimate of 30-day mortality for patients (and their relatives) when gastrostomy insertion is being discussed. This score requires evaluation as a decision-making tool in clinical practice. ANN analysis results were similar to the outcomes from the clinical score.

KW - ANN

KW - artificial neural network

KW - MLP

KW - multi-layer perceptron

U2 - 10.1016/j.gie.2011.07.043

DO - 10.1016/j.gie.2011.07.043

M3 - Journal article

C2 - 22032317

AN - SCOPUS:80055014236

VL - 74

SP - 1033

EP - 1039

JO - Gastrointestinal Endoscopy

JF - Gastrointestinal Endoscopy

SN - 0016-5107

IS - 5

ER -