Title :
Detection of Correct and Incorrect Measurements in Real-Time Continuous Glucose Monitoring Systems by Applying a Postprocessing Support Vector Machine
Author :
Leal, Y. ; Gonzalez-Abril, L. ; Lorencio, C. ; Bondia, J. ; Vehi, J.
Author_Institution :
Inst. of Inf. & Applic., Univ. of Girona, Girona, Spain
Abstract :
Support vector machines (SVMs) are an attractive option for detecting correct and incorrect measurements in real-time continuous glucose monitoring systems (RTCGMSs), because their learning mechanism can introduce a postprocessing strategy for imbalanced datasets. The proposed SVM considers the geometric mean to obtain a more balanced performance between sensitivity and specificity. To test this approach, 23 critically ill patients receiving insulin therapy were monitored over 72 h using an RTCGMS, and a dataset of 537 samples, classified according to International Standards Organization (ISO) criteria (372 correct and 165 incorrect measurements), was obtained. The results obtained were promising for patients with septic shock or with sepsis, for which the proposed system can be considered as reliable. However, this approach cannot be considered suitable for patients without sepsis.
Keywords :
ISO standards; biochemistry; biomedical equipment; biomedical measurement; blood; diseases; medical signal processing; patient monitoring; patient treatment; sensitivity; signal classification; support vector machines; International Standards Organization; SVM; correct measurement detection; critically ill patient monitoring; dataset classification; imbalanced datasets; incorrect measurement detection; insulin therapy; learning mechanism; post-processing support vector machine; postprocessing strategy; real-time continuous glucose monitoring systems; sensitivity; sepsis; septic shock; time 72 h; Accuracy; Insulin; Monitoring; Standards; Sugar; Support vector machines; Balanced performance; continuous glucose monitoring; critically ill patients; fault detection; support vector machines (SVMs); Aged; Algorithms; Blood Glucose; Computer Systems; Diagnosis, Computer-Assisted; Drug Therapy, Computer-Assisted; Female; Humans; Hyperglycemia; Hypoglycemic Agents; Insulin; Male; Middle Aged; Reproducibility of Results; Sensitivity and Specificity; Support Vector Machines;
Journal_Title :
Biomedical Engineering, IEEE Transactions on
DOI :
10.1109/TBME.2013.2244092