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Development and validation of an interpretable machine learning-based calculator for predicting 5-year weight trajectories after bariatric surgery: a multinational retrospective cohort SOPHIA study

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Academic Paper attributes

arXiv ID
2308.165850
arXiv Classification
Computer science
Computer science
0
Publication URL
arxiv.org/pdf/2308.165850
Publisher
ArXiv
ArXiv
0
DOI
doi.org/10.48550/ar...08.165850
Paid/Free
Free0
Academic Discipline
Statistics
Statistics
0
Computer science
Computer science
0
Machine learning
Machine learning
0
Submission Date
August 31, 2023
0
Author Names
Philippe Preux0
Ricardo V Cohen0
Robert Caiazzo0
Severine Andrieux0
Tomy Soumphonphakdy0
Valerie Monpellier0
Violeta Raverdy0
Anne Jacobs0
...
Paper abstract

Background Weight loss trajectories after bariatric surgery vary widely between individuals, and predicting weight loss before the operation remains challenging. We aimed to develop a model using machine learning to provide individual preoperative prediction of 5-year weight loss trajectories after surgery. Methods In this multinational retrospective observational study we enrolled adult participants (aged ge18 years) from ten prospective cohorts (including ABOS [NCT01129297], BAREVAL [NCT02310178], the Swedish Obese Subjects study, and a large cohort from the Dutch Obesity Clinic [Nederlandse Obesitas Kliniek]) and two randomised trials (SleevePass [NCT00793143] and SM-BOSS [NCT00356213]) in Europe, the Americas, and Asia, with a 5 year followup after Roux-en-Y gastric bypass, sleeve gastrectomy, or gastric band. Patients with a previous history of bariatric surgery or large delays between scheduled and actual visits were excluded. The training cohort comprised patients from two centres in France (ABOS and BAREVAL). The primary outcome was BMI at 5 years. A model was developed using least absolute shrinkage and selection operator to select variables and the classification and regression trees algorithm to build interpretable regression trees. The performances of the model were assessed through the median absolute deviation (MAD) and root mean squared error (RMSE) of BMI. Findings10 231 patients from 12 centres in ten countries were included in the analysis, corresponding to 30 602 patient-years. Among participants in all 12 cohorts, 7701 (75bullet3%) were female, 2530 (24bullet7%) were male. Among 434 baseline attributes available in the training cohort, seven variables were selected: height, weight, intervention type, age, diabetes status, diabetes duration, and smoking status. At 5 years, across external testing cohorts the overall mean MAD BMI was 2bullet8 kg/m2 (95% CI 2bullet6-3bullet0) and mean RMSE BMI was 4bullet7 kg/m2 (4bullet4-5bullet0), and the mean difference between predicted and observed BMI was-0bullet3 kg/m2 (SD 4bullet7). This model is incorporated in an easy to use and interpretable web-based prediction tool to help inform clinical decision before surgery. InterpretationWe developed a machine learning-based model, which is internationally validated, for predicting individual 5-year weight loss trajectories after three common bariatric interventions.

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