Systematic Review and Comparison of Publicly Available ICU Data Sets-A Decision Guide for Clinicians and Data Scientists.

Sauer, Christopher M; Dam, Tariq A; Celi, Leo A; Faltys, Martin; de la Hoz, Miguel A A; Adhikari, Lasith; Ziesemer, Kirsten A; Girbes, Armand; Thoral, Patrick J; Elbers, Paul (2022). Systematic Review and Comparison of Publicly Available ICU Data Sets-A Decision Guide for Clinicians and Data Scientists. Critical care medicine, 50(6), e581-e588. Wolters Kluwer Health 10.1097/CCM.0000000000005517

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OBJECTIVE

As data science and artificial intelligence continue to rapidly gain traction, the publication of freely available ICU datasets has become invaluable to propel data-driven clinical research. In this guide for clinicians and researchers, we aim to: 1) systematically search and identify all publicly available adult clinical ICU datasets, 2) compare their characteristics, data quality, and richness and critically appraise their strengths and weaknesses, and 3) provide researchers with suggestions, which datasets are appropriate for answering their clinical question.

DATA SOURCES

A systematic search was performed in Pubmed, ArXiv, MedRxiv, and BioRxiv.

STUDY SELECTION

We selected all studies that reported on publicly available adult patient-level intensive care datasets.

DATA EXTRACTION

A total of four publicly available, adult, critical care, patient-level databases were included (Amsterdam University Medical Center data base [AmsterdamUMCdb], eICU Collaborative Research Database eICU CRD], High time-resolution intensive care unit dataset [HiRID], and Medical Information Mart for Intensive Care-IV). Databases were compared using a priori defined categories, including demographics, patient characteristics, and data richness. The study protocol and search strategy were prospectively registered.

DATA SYNTHESIS

Four ICU databases fulfilled all criteria for inclusion and were queried using SQL (PostgreSQL version 12; PostgreSQL Global Development Group) and analyzed using R (R Foundation for Statistical Computing, Vienna, Austria). The number of unique patient admissions varied between 23,106 (AmsterdamUMCdb) and 200,859 (eICU-CRD). Frequency of laboratory values and vital signs was highest in HiRID, for example, 5.2 (±3.4) lactate values per day and 29.7 (±10.2) systolic blood pressure values per hour. Treatment intensity varied with vasopressor and ventilatory support in 69.0% and 83.0% of patients in AmsterdamUMCdb versus 12.0% and 21.0% in eICU-CRD, respectively. ICU mortality ranged from 5.5% in eICU-CRD to 9.9% in AmsterdamUMCdb.

CONCLUSIONS

We identified four publicly available adult clinical ICU datasets. Sample size, severity of illness, treatment intensity, and frequency of reported parameters differ markedly between the databases. This should guide clinicians and researchers which databases to best answer their clinical questions.

Item Type:

Journal Article (Review Article)

Division/Institute:

04 Faculty of Medicine > Department of Intensive Care, Emergency Medicine and Anaesthesiology (DINA) > Clinic of Intensive Care

UniBE Contributor:

Faltys, Martin

Subjects:

600 Technology > 610 Medicine & health

ISSN:

1530-0293

Publisher:

Wolters Kluwer Health

Language:

English

Submitter:

Pubmed Import

Date Deposited:

03 Mar 2022 09:17

Last Modified:

08 Jun 2023 13:35

Publisher DOI:

10.1097/CCM.0000000000005517

PubMed ID:

35234175

BORIS DOI:

10.48350/166313

URI:

https://boris.unibe.ch/id/eprint/166313

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