VederContinuous glucose monitoring (CGM) can identify hypoglycemia in hemodialysis (HD) patients, who are at risk for this event. On the other hand, machine learning (ML) has remarkable value in CGM-based studies, but none of previous studies addressed the problem of hypoglycemia prediction in HD patients. Therefore, we conducted this study to setup different machine learning models based on CGM data (specifically, CGM metrics) to assess the risk of mild and severe hypoglycemia during HD sessions. We studied a cohort of twenty patients (11 with and 9 without diabetes) undergoing chronic HD. All patients underwent CGM for up to 2 weeks. We identified 92 HD sessions and related pre-HD sessions of 8 hours length. HD sessions were used to identify mild (<70 mg/dL) and severe (<54 mg/dL) hypoglycemia, whereas pre-HD sessions were used to compute 48 CGM metrics. We then performed feature selection to identify the most relevant metrics for hypoglycemia prediction. The metrics performance was assessed with binary decision tree, k-nearest neighbors, penalized logistic regression, Naïve Bayes, random forest ensemble algorithm. We found that mild hypoglycemia was best predicted by six metrics (ADRR, M-value100, CONGA1h, TIR70-180, MAGE-, MAG30), whereas severe hypoglycemia by three metrics (ADRR, CONGA1h, TIR70-180). The best overall performance was achieved by the tree, showing area under receiver operating characteristic curve (AUC) equal to 68.2% for prediction of mild hyperglycemia, and AUC equal to 81.2% for severe hyperglycemia. Notably, individual hypoglycemia risk assessment has potential to guide personalized HD-related clinical decisions to minimize such riske articolo

Assessing hypoglycemia risk during hemodialysis using an explainable machine learning approach based on continuous glucose monitoring metrics

Piersanti A.;Tura A.
2025

Abstract

VederContinuous glucose monitoring (CGM) can identify hypoglycemia in hemodialysis (HD) patients, who are at risk for this event. On the other hand, machine learning (ML) has remarkable value in CGM-based studies, but none of previous studies addressed the problem of hypoglycemia prediction in HD patients. Therefore, we conducted this study to setup different machine learning models based on CGM data (specifically, CGM metrics) to assess the risk of mild and severe hypoglycemia during HD sessions. We studied a cohort of twenty patients (11 with and 9 without diabetes) undergoing chronic HD. All patients underwent CGM for up to 2 weeks. We identified 92 HD sessions and related pre-HD sessions of 8 hours length. HD sessions were used to identify mild (<70 mg/dL) and severe (<54 mg/dL) hypoglycemia, whereas pre-HD sessions were used to compute 48 CGM metrics. We then performed feature selection to identify the most relevant metrics for hypoglycemia prediction. The metrics performance was assessed with binary decision tree, k-nearest neighbors, penalized logistic regression, Naïve Bayes, random forest ensemble algorithm. We found that mild hypoglycemia was best predicted by six metrics (ADRR, M-value100, CONGA1h, TIR70-180, MAGE-, MAG30), whereas severe hypoglycemia by three metrics (ADRR, CONGA1h, TIR70-180). The best overall performance was achieved by the tree, showing area under receiver operating characteristic curve (AUC) equal to 68.2% for prediction of mild hyperglycemia, and AUC equal to 81.2% for severe hyperglycemia. Notably, individual hypoglycemia risk assessment has potential to guide personalized HD-related clinical decisions to minimize such riske articolo
2025
Istituto di Neuroscienze - IN - Sede Secondaria Padova
Vedere Hypoglycemia, Hemodialysis, Continuous Glucose Monitoring, Machine Learning, Diabetes Mellitus, Risk predictionarticolo
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/20.500.14243/523708
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