LGMLJan 24, 2025

Multimodal Prescriptive Deep Learning

arXiv:2501.14152v11 citationsh-index: 2
Originality Highly original
AI Analysis

This addresses the need for prescriptive methods that handle multimodal data in healthcare applications, offering significant improvements in treatment outcomes.

The authors tackled the problem of generating outcome-optimizing prescriptions from multimodal data by introducing Prescriptive Neural Networks (PNNs), which reduced estimated postoperative complication rates by 32% in TAVR procedures and mortality rates by over 40% in liver trauma injuries.

We introduce a multimodal deep learning framework, Prescriptive Neural Networks (PNNs), that combines ideas from optimization and machine learning, and is, to the best of our knowledge, the first prescriptive method to handle multimodal data. The PNN is a feedforward neural network trained on embeddings to output an outcome-optimizing prescription. In two real-world multimodal datasets, we demonstrate that PNNs prescribe treatments that are able to significantly improve estimated outcomes in transcatheter aortic valve replacement (TAVR) procedures by reducing estimated postoperative complication rates by 32% and in liver trauma injuries by reducing estimated mortality rates by over 40%. In four real-world, unimodal tabular datasets, we demonstrate that PNNs outperform or perform comparably to other well-known, state-of-the-art prescriptive models; importantly, on tabular datasets, we also recover interpretability through knowledge distillation, fitting interpretable Optimal Classification Tree models onto the PNN prescriptions as classification targets, which is critical for many real-world applications. Finally, we demonstrate that our multimodal PNN models achieve stability across randomized data splits comparable to other prescriptive methods and produce realistic prescriptions across the different datasets.

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