MedGCN: Medication recommendation and lab test imputation via graph convolutional networks
This work addresses the need for cost-saving and effective decision support in healthcare by assisting physicians with prescriptions and reducing redundant lab tests, though it appears incremental as it builds on existing graph neural network methods.
The authors tackled the problem of automating medication recommendations and lab test imputations in clinical practice by developing MedGCN, a system that uses graph convolutional networks to integrate medical entities, resulting in state-of-the-art performance on real-world datasets like NMEDW and MIMIC-III.
Laboratory testing and medication prescription are two of the most important routines in daily clinical practice. Developing an artificial intelligence system that can automatically make lab test imputations and medication recommendations can save costs on potentially redundant lab tests and inform physicians of a more effective prescription. We present an intelligent medical system (named MedGCN) that can automatically recommend the patients' medications based on their incomplete lab tests, and can even accurately estimate the lab values that have not been taken. In our system, we integrate the complex relations between multiple types of medical entities with their inherent features in a heterogeneous graph. Then we model the graph to learn a distributed representation for each entity in the graph based on graph convolutional networks (GCN). By the propagation of graph convolutional networks, the entity representations can incorporate multiple types of medical information that can benefit multiple medical tasks. Moreover, we introduce a cross regularization strategy to reduce overfitting for multi-task training by the interaction between the multiple tasks. In this study, we construct a graph to associate 4 types of medical entities, i.e., patients, encounters, lab tests, and medications, and applied a graph neural network to learn node embeddings for medication recommendation and lab test imputation. we validate our MedGCN model on two real-world datasets: NMEDW and MIMIC-III. The experimental results on both datasets demonstrate that our model can outperform the state-of-the-art in both tasks. We believe that our innovative system can provide a promising and reliable way to assist physicians to make medication prescriptions and to save costs on potentially redundant lab tests.