MLLGApr 3, 2019

The Medical Deconfounder: Assessing Treatment Effects with Electronic Health Records

arXiv:1904.02098v26 citations
Originality Incremental advance
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This addresses the challenge of cost-effective medication assessment for healthcare, though it is an incremental improvement over existing deconfounding methods applied to EHRs.

The paper tackles the problem of estimating treatment effects from electronic health records (EHRs) by addressing bias from unobserved confounders, resulting in a method that produces closer-to-truth estimates and identifies effective medications more consistent with medical literature.

The treatment effects of medications play a key role in guiding medical prescriptions. They are usually assessed with randomized controlled trials (RCTs), which are expensive. Recently, large-scale electronic health records (EHRs) have become available, opening up new opportunities for more cost-effective assessments. However, assessing a treatment effect from EHRs is challenging: it is biased by unobserved confounders, unmeasured variables that affect both patients' medical prescription and their outcome, e.g. the patients' social economic status. To adjust for unobserved confounders, we develop the medical deconfounder, a machine learning algorithm that unbiasedly estimates treatment effects from EHRs. The medical deconfounder first constructs a substitute confounder by modeling which medications were prescribed to each patient; this substitute confounder is guaranteed to capture all multi-medication confounders, observed or unobserved (arXiv:1805.06826). It then uses this substitute confounder to adjust for the confounding bias in the analysis. We validate the medical deconfounder on two simulated and two real medical data sets. Compared to classical approaches, the medical deconfounder produces closer-to-truth treatment effect estimates; it also identifies effective medications that are more consistent with the findings in the medical literature.

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