LGAIMar 5, 2025

Leveraging Taxonomy Similarity for Next Activity Prediction in Patient Treatment

arXiv:2503.07638v2h-index: 9
Originality Incremental advance
AI Analysis

This work addresses treatment planning for physicians by making predictions more explainable, but it is incremental as it builds on existing predictive business process monitoring methods.

The paper tackled the challenge of predicting the next treatment step in patient care by proposing TS4NAP, which uses medical taxonomies and graph matching to assess code similarities, showing potential to improve prediction accuracy and explainability.

The rapid progress in modern medicine presents physicians with complex challenges when planning patient treatment. Techniques from the field of Predictive Business Process Monitoring, like Next-activity-prediction (NAP) can be used as a promising technique to support physicians in treatment planning, by proposing a possible next treatment step. Existing patient data, often in the form of electronic health records, can be analyzed to recommend the next suitable step in the treatment process. However, the use of patient data poses many challenges due to its knowledge-intensive character, high variability and scarcity of medical data. To overcome these challenges, this article examines the use of the knowledge encoded in taxonomies to improve and explain the prediction of the next activity in the treatment process. This study proposes the TS4NAP approach, which uses medical taxonomies (ICD-10-CM and ICD-10-PCS) in combination with graph matching to assess the similarities of medical codes to predict the next treatment step. The effectiveness of the proposed approach will be evaluated using event logs that are derived from the MIMIC-IV dataset. The results highlight the potential of using domain-specific knowledge held in taxonomies to improve the prediction of the next activity, and thus can improve treatment planning and decision-making by making the predictions more explainable.

Foundations

The foundational work for this paper's niche, ranked by how specifically the neighbourhood builds on it — not by global fame.

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