scholarly journals Predictive Analysis of Coronary Heart Disease (CHD) based on Machine Learning Classification Algorithm

IJARCCE ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 10 (12) ◽  
Author(s):  
Dillip Narayan Sahu ◽  
Vijay Pal Singh
Author(s):  
Ankit Singh

Cardiovascular Disease is the leading cause of death (Approximately, 17 million people every year) in the all the area of the world. Prediction of heart disease is the critical challenge in the area of the clinical data analysis. The objective of paper is to build the model for predicting the Heart Disease using various machine learning classification algorithm. Classification is a powerful machine learning technique that is commonly used for prediction. Some of the classification algorithm are Logistic Regression, Support Vector Machine, Naïve Bayes, Decision Tree, Random Forest Classifier, KNN. This paper investigate which algorithm is used for the improving the accuracy in the prediction of heart disease. And, a comparative analysis on the accuracy and mean squared error is to done for predicting the best model. The result of the study indicates that KNN algorithm is effective in predicting the model with the accuracy of the 85.71% and having a very low mean squared error.


2019 ◽  
Author(s):  
Zhenzhen Du ◽  
Yujie Yang ◽  
Jing Zheng ◽  
Qi Li ◽  
Denan Lin ◽  
...  

BACKGROUND Predictions of cardiovascular disease risks based on health records have long attracted broad research interests. Despite extensive efforts, the prediction accuracy has remained unsatisfactory. This raises the question as to whether the data insufficiency, statistical and machine-learning methods, or intrinsic noise have hindered the performance of previous approaches, and how these issues can be alleviated. OBJECTIVE Based on a large population of patients with hypertension in Shenzhen, China, we aimed to establish a high-precision coronary heart disease (CHD) prediction model through big data and machine-learning METHODS Data from a large cohort of 42,676 patients with hypertension, including 20,156 patients with CHD onset, were investigated from electronic health records (EHRs) 1-3 years prior to CHD onset (for CHD-positive cases) or during a disease-free follow-up period of more than 3 years (for CHD-negative cases). The population was divided evenly into independent training and test datasets. Various machine-learning methods were adopted on the training set to achieve high-accuracy prediction models and the results were compared with traditional statistical methods and well-known risk scales. Comparison analyses were performed to investigate the effects of training sample size, factor sets, and modeling approaches on the prediction performance. RESULTS An ensemble method, XGBoost, achieved high accuracy in predicting 3-year CHD onset for the independent test dataset with an area under the receiver operating characteristic curve (AUC) value of 0.943. Comparison analysis showed that nonlinear models (K-nearest neighbor AUC 0.908, random forest AUC 0.938) outperform linear models (logistic regression AUC 0.865) on the same datasets, and machine-learning methods significantly surpassed traditional risk scales or fixed models (eg, Framingham cardiovascular disease risk models). Further analyses revealed that using time-dependent features obtained from multiple records, including both statistical variables and changing-trend variables, helped to improve the performance compared to using only static features. Subpopulation analysis showed that the impact of feature design had a more significant effect on model accuracy than the population size. Marginal effect analysis showed that both traditional and EHR factors exhibited highly nonlinear characteristics with respect to the risk scores. CONCLUSIONS We demonstrated that accurate risk prediction of CHD from EHRs is possible given a sufficiently large population of training data. Sophisticated machine-learning methods played an important role in tackling the heterogeneity and nonlinear nature of disease prediction. Moreover, accumulated EHR data over multiple time points provided additional features that were valuable for risk prediction. Our study highlights the importance of accumulating big data from EHRs for accurate disease predictions.


2019 ◽  
Vol 97 ◽  
pp. 103257 ◽  
Author(s):  
Juan-Jose Beunza ◽  
Enrique Puertas ◽  
Ester García-Ovejero ◽  
Gema Villalba ◽  
Emilia Condes ◽  
...  

Author(s):  
Tyler F. Rooks ◽  
Andrea S. Dargie ◽  
Valeta Carol Chancey

Abstract A shortcoming of using environmental sensors for the surveillance of potentially concussive events is substantial uncertainty regarding whether the event was caused by head acceleration (“head impacts”) or sensor motion (with no head acceleration). The goal of the present study is to develop a machine learning model to classify environmental sensor data obtained in the field and evaluate the performance of the model against the performance of the proprietary classification algorithm used by the environmental sensor. Data were collected from Soldiers attending sparring sessions conducted under a U.S. Army Combatives School course. Data from one sparring session were used to train a decision tree classification algorithm to identify good and bad signals. Data from the remaining sparring sessions were kept as an external validation set. The performance of the proprietary algorithm used by the sensor was also compared to the trained algorithm performance. The trained decision tree was able to correctly classify 95% of events for internal cross-validation and 88% of events for the external validation set. Comparatively, the proprietary algorithm was only able to correctly classify 61% of the events. In general, the trained algorithm was better able to predict when a signal was good or bad compared to the proprietary algorithm. The present study shows it is possible to train a decision tree algorithm using environmental sensor data collected in the field.


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