The Oncology Prognosis Tool is a classifier used to determine the eligibility of patients for serious illness conversation. It was deployed at the Mount Sinai Oncology Outpatient unit in March 2021 and Inpatient unit in August 2022.
Challenges
- Majority of patients(~ 80%) with advanced cancer want to stay informed about Prognosis 1
- The most common prognostic approach is Clinician Prediction of Survival (CPS) 1
- Clinicians intuition is often said to be optimistically biased2 which may result in
- Aggressive Treatment
- Being reluctant to communicate prognostic information to patients 3,4,5
Opportunity: Optimize confidence of clinicians’ prognostic judgment
Goal: Develop a classifier to determine the eligibility of patients for serious illness conversation
Introduction
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Accurate prognostication of survival for patients with advance cancer is vital (1)
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It informs many personal and clinical decisions
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Prognosis is a process rather than a single event and patient’s prognosis may change over time based on: (3)
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Treatment response
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Development of complications
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Competing co-morbidities
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Prognostic accuracy varies by:(1)
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patient population
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Setting
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Time frame of prediction
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10 major themes for the future prognostic research (1)
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Enhancing prognostic accuracy
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Improving reliability and reproducibility of prognosis
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Identifying the appropriate prognostic tool for a given setting
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Predicting the risks and benefits of cancer therapies
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Predicting survival for pediatric populations
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Translating prognostic knowledge into practice
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Understanding the impact of prognostic uncertainty
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Communicating prognosis
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Clarifying outcomes associated with delivery of prognostic information
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Standardizing prognosis terminology
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Dependents of patient’s prognosis: (2,3)
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Complex decisions regarding initiation, intensity, termination of palliative systemic therapies
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Palliative procedures or surgery
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Artificial nutrition or hydration
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Hospice care
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Clinician Prediction of survival (CPS) is the most common approach (22,23,24,25)
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Temporal approach (how long)
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Surprise questions (died in specific time frame? )
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Probabilistic approach (probability of survival in specific time frame)
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Early Palliative Care has been shown to improve health related quality of life (HRQOL),mood, and symptom score (34,35,36,37)
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Early PC may increase patient satisfaction with care
Problem
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Approximately 80 percent of patients with advanced cancer want to be informed of their:(1)
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prognosis
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expected treatment outcome
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Advert effects
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Bodily changes in the last weeks to days of life
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Patients hesitate to ask about prognosis directly and expect clinicians initiate such a conversation (1)
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Caregivers have strong desire to be informed
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Clinician intuition is often inaccurate (4)
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Too optimistic may result in overly aggressive cancer treatment
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Physicians are reluctant to communicate prognostic information to patients (5,6,7,9)
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Lack of confidence in the accuracy of their prognostic judgment
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Their judgments have been shown to be optimistically biased
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Lack of historical evidence based prognostic information (10, 11)
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barriers may inhibit physicians’ capacity or willing to communicate
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Structural factors (5,10,17,18 )
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Lack of time
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Lack of financial incentives
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Situational factors (10)
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Clinical circumstances
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Disease
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acuity
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Severity
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Trajectory
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Patient characteristics
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Available clinical information
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Emotional state of patients or patient emotional distress (19)
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Irreducible uncertainty arising from the reliability, credibility and adequacy of all prognostic measures (20,21)
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Individual differences in physicians’ tolerance pf ambiguity
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The most common prognostic approach is: Clinician Prediction of Survival (CPS) —> Probabilistic (1)
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Some of prognostic factors in oncology do not appear to have prognostic impact on advanced cancer patients in PC (34,39,40)
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Tumor staging
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Histologic grade
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Genetics
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There us a lack of studies that evaluated the prognosis of outpatients with advanced cancer who are receiving anti-neoplastic treatment and concomitantly undergoing PC (34)
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Most of the studies describe a sample of patients with advanced disease , a low functional performance and a short life expectancy. (41)
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Current Approaches and Solutions
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Examples are including:(1)
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Glasgow Prognostic Score (GPS) – common
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Palliative Performance Scale (PPS) – common
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Palliative Prognostic Score (PaP) – common
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Palliative Prognostic Index (PPI) – common
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Prognostic in Palliative Care Study (PiPS)
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Objective Prognostic Score (OPS)
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Clinical Prediction models (CPMS) have been increasingly disseminated —> https://eprognosis.ucsf.edu/
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A growing number of CPMs estimate short term (6-12 months) survival
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Useful for acute critical EOL care decisions
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Pursue palliative versus curative care (12, 13,14,15,16)
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Predict toxicity of therapy in patients with advance cancer
Main Goal and Objectives
Proposed Solution
Target Audience
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Family Medicine
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Oncology
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Proposed Trigger for Prediction
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Realtime Prediction
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Patients have the selected primary tumor site —> will be defined by Dr. Cardinale Smith
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Have outpatient/ER visit number
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Prediction on Demand
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Physician put the request in Epic
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Streaming CDS pipeline will receive it
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Generate prediction and write it into a epic flowsheet in Epic
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Patients and Methods
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Inclusion Criteria
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Age >= 21 yrs
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Patients should be in the Cancer Registry
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Primary Tumor Site should be in he selected primary tumor site —> with count >=200
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Followup time in the CA registry >= 90 days
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Prognostic factors (26,27,28,29,30)
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Deterioration in performance status (PS)
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Palliative Performance scale
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Karnofsky Performance status
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ECOG performance status
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Presence of distant metastasis
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dyspnea at rest
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Edema
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Ascite
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Malnutrition Assessment
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Oral Intake
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Level of consciousness
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CAM Assessment
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Cognitive Failure
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Pain
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Cancer anorexia-cachexia syndrome
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reduced food intake
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abnormal metabolism
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Poor appetite
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Nutrition impact symptoms (NIS)
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Nausea
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Weight loss
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BMI
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Changes in body composition
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Sarcopenia
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Inflammation
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Testosterone level
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Cachexia staging score
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Eastern Cooperative Oncology Group (ECOG)
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SIRS
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CRP
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Albumin
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WBC
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Lymphocyte percentage
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Phase Angle (PA)
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Tell-tale signs (31,32)
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Pulselessness of the radial artery
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Hyperextension of the neck
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Grunting of vocal cords
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Cheyne-Stokes breathing
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Death rattle
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loss of facial muscle tone (drooping ofthe nasolabial folds) (33)
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Age
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Metabolism
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Co-morbidities (1)
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Rheumatoid Arthritis
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Psoriasis
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Cancer Type
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Planned Chemotherapy dose
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standard
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Reduced
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Planned number of chemotherapy drugs
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Poly >1
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Mono = 1
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Hemoglobin
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Creatinine Clearance
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< 34 ml/min
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>= 34 ml/min
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Hearing —> fair, poor,totally deaf, excellent or good
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Number of fans in the past 6 months
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Level of activity
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Data Dictionary: ONC_DDV01232020.xlsx
Historical Cohort Population Structure: AA_COHORTV02102020.html
Presentation Slide Deck: AA_WG_long_version_V09032020.pptx (Long Version)
AA_WG_version_V10062020.pptx (Short Version)
Big Data Presentation Slide Deck, presented on November 9, 2020: AA_BigData_version_V11092020.pptx
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Modeling approach
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Multivariate cox regression (34)
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Backward variable elimination
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Discrimination properties were evaluated
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AUC score
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Kolmogorov-Smirnov (K-S) goodness of fit —> distance between empirical distribution function and cumulative distribution function ——> measure the ability of prognostic tools
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Barretos Prognostic Nomogram (BPN)
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Calibration based on Hosmer-Lemeshow test
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Performance Evaluation
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Each prediction will be validated retrospectively and prospectively within the prediction window of 30 days, 60 days, and 90 days
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Diagnosis Grouping Lookup: (source: Mark Liu)
ICD-10 Code Mapping_updatedML.xlsx