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arxiv: 2403.11425 · v4 · pith:7QHR7SARnew · submitted 2024-03-18 · 💻 cs.LG · cs.CL

Narrative Feature or Structured Feature? A Study of Large Language Models to Identify Cancer Patients at Risk of Heart Failure

classification 💻 cs.LG cs.CL
keywords cancerpatientsfeaturemodelsnarrativeriskfailurefeatures
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Cancer treatments are known to introduce cardiotoxicity, negatively impacting outcomes and survivorship. Identifying cancer patients at risk of heart failure (HF) is critical to improving cancer treatment outcomes and safety. This study examined machine learning (ML) models to identify cancer patients at risk of HF using electronic health records (EHRs), including traditional ML, Time-Aware long short-term memory (T-LSTM), and large language models (LLMs) using novel narrative features derived from the structured medical codes. We identified a cancer cohort of 12,806 patients from the University of Florida Health, diagnosed with lung, breast, and colorectal cancers, among which 1,602 individuals developed HF after cancer. The LLM, GatorTron-3.9B, achieved the best F1 scores, outperforming the traditional support vector machines by 39%, the T-LSTM deep learning model by 7%, and a widely used transformer model, BERT, by 5.6%. The analysis shows that the proposed narrative features remarkably increased feature density and improved performance.

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Reviewed papers in the Pith corpus that reference this work. Sorted by Pith novelty score.

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    An LLM-based NLP tool was developed and tested to identify four types of HIV stigma in clinical notes, achieving up to 0.62 micro F1 score with GatorTron-large.