From inverse problems in mathematical physiology to quantitative differential diagnoses.

The improved capacity to acquire quantitative data in a clinical setting has generally failed to improve outcomes in acutely ill patients, suggesting a need for advances in computer-supported data interpretation and decision making. In particular, the application of mathematical models of experiment...

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Main Authors: Sven Zenker, Jonathan Rubin, Gilles Clermont
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Public Library of Science (PLoS) 2007-11-01
Series:PLoS Computational Biology
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pcbi.0030204
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spelling doaj-c11394659534408980e004d5cfa1f7a32021-04-21T15:05:04ZengPublic Library of Science (PLoS)PLoS Computational Biology1553-734X1553-73582007-11-01311e20410.1371/journal.pcbi.0030204From inverse problems in mathematical physiology to quantitative differential diagnoses.Sven ZenkerJonathan RubinGilles ClermontThe improved capacity to acquire quantitative data in a clinical setting has generally failed to improve outcomes in acutely ill patients, suggesting a need for advances in computer-supported data interpretation and decision making. In particular, the application of mathematical models of experimentally elucidated physiological mechanisms could augment the interpretation of quantitative, patient-specific information and help to better target therapy. Yet, such models are typically complex and nonlinear, a reality that often precludes the identification of unique parameters and states of the model that best represent available data. Hypothesizing that this non-uniqueness can convey useful information, we implemented a simplified simulation of a common differential diagnostic process (hypotension in an acute care setting), using a combination of a mathematical model of the cardiovascular system, a stochastic measurement model, and Bayesian inference techniques to quantify parameter and state uncertainty. The output of this procedure is a probability density function on the space of model parameters and initial conditions for a particular patient, based on prior population information together with patient-specific clinical observations. We show that multimodal posterior probability density functions arise naturally, even when unimodal and uninformative priors are used. The peaks of these densities correspond to clinically relevant differential diagnoses and can, in the simplified simulation setting, be constrained to a single diagnosis by assimilating additional observations from dynamical interventions (e.g., fluid challenge). We conclude that the ill-posedness of the inverse problem in quantitative physiology is not merely a technical obstacle, but rather reflects clinical reality and, when addressed adequately in the solution process, provides a novel link between mathematically described physiological knowledge and the clinical concept of differential diagnoses. We outline possible steps toward translating this computational approach to the bedside, to supplement today's evidence-based medicine with a quantitatively founded model-based medicine that integrates mechanistic knowledge with patient-specific information.https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pcbi.0030204
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Sven Zenker
Jonathan Rubin
Gilles Clermont
spellingShingle Sven Zenker
Jonathan Rubin
Gilles Clermont
From inverse problems in mathematical physiology to quantitative differential diagnoses.
PLoS Computational Biology
author_facet Sven Zenker
Jonathan Rubin
Gilles Clermont
author_sort Sven Zenker
title From inverse problems in mathematical physiology to quantitative differential diagnoses.
title_short From inverse problems in mathematical physiology to quantitative differential diagnoses.
title_full From inverse problems in mathematical physiology to quantitative differential diagnoses.
title_fullStr From inverse problems in mathematical physiology to quantitative differential diagnoses.
title_full_unstemmed From inverse problems in mathematical physiology to quantitative differential diagnoses.
title_sort from inverse problems in mathematical physiology to quantitative differential diagnoses.
publisher Public Library of Science (PLoS)
series PLoS Computational Biology
issn 1553-734X
1553-7358
publishDate 2007-11-01
description The improved capacity to acquire quantitative data in a clinical setting has generally failed to improve outcomes in acutely ill patients, suggesting a need for advances in computer-supported data interpretation and decision making. In particular, the application of mathematical models of experimentally elucidated physiological mechanisms could augment the interpretation of quantitative, patient-specific information and help to better target therapy. Yet, such models are typically complex and nonlinear, a reality that often precludes the identification of unique parameters and states of the model that best represent available data. Hypothesizing that this non-uniqueness can convey useful information, we implemented a simplified simulation of a common differential diagnostic process (hypotension in an acute care setting), using a combination of a mathematical model of the cardiovascular system, a stochastic measurement model, and Bayesian inference techniques to quantify parameter and state uncertainty. The output of this procedure is a probability density function on the space of model parameters and initial conditions for a particular patient, based on prior population information together with patient-specific clinical observations. We show that multimodal posterior probability density functions arise naturally, even when unimodal and uninformative priors are used. The peaks of these densities correspond to clinically relevant differential diagnoses and can, in the simplified simulation setting, be constrained to a single diagnosis by assimilating additional observations from dynamical interventions (e.g., fluid challenge). We conclude that the ill-posedness of the inverse problem in quantitative physiology is not merely a technical obstacle, but rather reflects clinical reality and, when addressed adequately in the solution process, provides a novel link between mathematically described physiological knowledge and the clinical concept of differential diagnoses. We outline possible steps toward translating this computational approach to the bedside, to supplement today's evidence-based medicine with a quantitatively founded model-based medicine that integrates mechanistic knowledge with patient-specific information.
url https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pcbi.0030204
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