Predictive Models for Emergency Department Triage using Machine Learning: A Systematic Review
Article Information
Fei Gao1*, Baptiste Boukebous3, 4, Mario Pozzar1, 2, Enora Alaoui1, 2, Batourou Sano1, 2, Sahar Bayat-Makoei1
1University of Rennes, EHESP, CNRS, Inserm, Research on Health Services and Management, Rennes, France
2University of Rennes, Rennes, France
3ECAMO, UMR1153, Centre of Research in Epidemiology and StatisticS, INSERM, Paris, France
4Hoptial Bichat/Beaujon, APHP, Paris, France
*Corresponding Author: Fei GAO, EHESP School of Public Health, Department of Quantitative Methods for Public Health, Avenue of Professor Léon Bernard, 35043 Rennes, France
Received: 22 April 2022; Accepted: 29 April 2022; Published: 26 May 2022
Citation: Fei Gao, Baptiste Boukebous, Mario Pozzar, Enora Alaoui, Batourou Sano, Sahar Bayat-Makoei. Predictive Models for Emergency Department Triage using Machine Learning: A Systematic Review. Obstetrics and Gynecology Research 5 (2022): 136-157.
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Background: Recently, many research groups have tried to develop emergency department triage decision support systems based on big volumes of historical clinical data to differentiate and prioritize patients. Machine learning models might improve the predictive capacity of emergency department triage systems. The aim of this review was to assess the performance of recently described machine learning models for patient triage in emergency departments, and to identify future challenges.
Methods: Four databases (ScienceDirect, PubMed, Google Scholar and Springer) were searched using key words identified in the research questions. To focus on the latest studies on the subject, the most cited papers between 2018 and October 2021 were selected. Only works with hospital admission and critical illness as outcomes were included in the analysis.
Results: Twenty-one articles concerned the two outcomes (hospital admission and critical illness) and developed 75 predictive models. Random Forest and Logistic Regression were the most commonly used prediction algorithms, and the receiver operating characteristic-area under the curve (ROC-AUC) the most frequently used metric to assess the algorithm prediction performance. Boosting, Random Forest and Logistic Regression were the most discriminant models according to the selected studies.
Conclusions: Machine learning-based triage systems could improve decision-making in emergency departments, thus leading to better patients’ outcomes. However, there is still scope for improvement concerning the prediction performance and explicability of ML models.
Keywords
Triage, Emergency Department/Emer-gency Room, Machine Learning, Modeling, Model, Classification, Predictive, Artificially Intelligence, Decision Support Systems, Patient Prioritization, Natural Language Processing
Triage articles Triage Research articles Triage review articles Triage PubMed articles Triage PubMed Central articles Triage 2023 articles Triage 2024 articles Triage Scopus articles Triage impact factor journals Triage Scopus journals Triage PubMed journals Triage medical journals Triage free journals Triage best journals Triage top journals Triage free medical journals Triage famous journals Triage Google Scholar indexed journals Emergency Department articles Emergency Department Research articles Emergency Department review articles Emergency Department PubMed articles Emergency Department PubMed Central articles Emergency Department 2023 articles Emergency Department 2024 articles Emergency Department Scopus articles Emergency Department impact factor journals Emergency Department Scopus journals Emergency Department PubMed journals Emergency Department medical journals Emergency Department free journals Emergency Department best journals Emergency Department top journals Emergency Department free medical journals Emergency Department famous journals Emergency Department Google Scholar indexed journals Machine Learning articles Machine Learning Research articles Machine Learning review articles Machine Learning PubMed articles Machine Learning PubMed Central articles Machine Learning 2023 articles Machine Learning 2024 articles Machine Learning Scopus articles Machine Learning impact factor journals Machine Learning Scopus journals Machine Learning PubMed journals Machine Learning medical journals Machine Learning free journals Machine Learning best journals Machine Learning top journals Machine Learning free medical journals Machine Learning famous journals Machine Learning Google Scholar indexed journals Modeling articles Modeling Research articles Modeling review articles Modeling PubMed articles Modeling PubMed Central articles Modeling 2023 articles Modeling 2024 articles Modeling Scopus articles Modeling impact factor journals Modeling Scopus journals Modeling PubMed journals Modeling medical journals Modeling free journals Modeling best journals Modeling top journals Modeling free medical journals Modeling famous journals Modeling Google Scholar indexed journals Classification articles Classification Research articles Classification review articles Classification PubMed articles Classification PubMed Central articles Classification 2023 articles Classification 2024 articles Classification Scopus articles Classification impact factor journals Classification Scopus journals Classification PubMed journals Classification medical journals Classification free journals Classification best journals Classification top journals Classification free medical journals Classification famous journals Classification Google Scholar indexed journals Predictive articles Predictive Research articles Predictive review articles Predictive PubMed articles Predictive PubMed Central articles Predictive 2023 articles Predictive 2024 articles Predictive Scopus articles Predictive impact factor journals Predictive Scopus journals Predictive PubMed journals Predictive medical journals Predictive free journals Predictive best journals Predictive top journals Predictive free medical journals Predictive famous journals Predictive Google Scholar indexed journals Artificially Intelligence articles Artificially Intelligence Research articles Artificially Intelligence review articles Artificially Intelligence PubMed articles Artificially Intelligence PubMed Central articles Artificially Intelligence 2023 articles Artificially Intelligence 2024 articles Artificially Intelligence Scopus articles Artificially Intelligence impact factor journals Artificially Intelligence Scopus journals Artificially Intelligence PubMed journals Artificially Intelligence medical journals Artificially Intelligence free journals Artificially Intelligence best journals Artificially Intelligence top journals Artificially Intelligence free medical journals Artificially Intelligence famous journals Artificially Intelligence Google Scholar indexed journals Decision Support Systems articles Decision Support Systems Research articles Decision Support Systems review articles Decision Support Systems PubMed articles Decision Support Systems PubMed Central articles Decision Support Systems 2023 articles Decision Support Systems 2024 articles Decision Support Systems Scopus articles Decision Support Systems impact factor journals Decision Support Systems Scopus journals Decision Support Systems PubMed journals Decision Support Systems medical journals Decision Support Systems free journals Decision Support Systems best journals Decision Support Systems top journals Decision Support Systems free medical journals Decision Support Systems famous journals Decision Support Systems Google Scholar indexed journals Patient Prioritization articles Patient Prioritization Research articles Patient Prioritization review articles Patient Prioritization PubMed articles Patient Prioritization PubMed Central articles Patient Prioritization 2023 articles Patient Prioritization 2024 articles Patient Prioritization Scopus articles Patient Prioritization impact factor journals Patient Prioritization Scopus journals Patient Prioritization PubMed journals Patient Prioritization medical journals Patient Prioritization free journals Patient Prioritization best journals Patient Prioritization top journals Patient Prioritization free medical journals Patient Prioritization famous journals Patient Prioritization Google Scholar indexed journals
Article Details
1. Background
Emergency service use has increased by approxi- mately 35% over the last 20 years, whereas the number of emergency departments (ED) has declined by 11% in the same period [1-2]. Consequently, overcrowded emergency rooms and uneven distribution of resources are now crucial public health issues. ED, where diagnostic and therapeutic interventions must be executed rapidly and effectively [3], are one of the biggest sources of hospitalization [4-5]. On arrival at the ED, patients are first classified according to the severity of their condition, in order to provide rapid treatment to those requiring immediate medical intervention. The aim of this triage, usually performed by a nurse on the basis of the patients’ vital signs and main complaint [6-7], is to optimize the waiting time and prioritize resource usage. Under-triage (low sensitivity) of critical patients can delay treatment and increase mortality. Over-triage (low specificity) may worsen emergency room overcrowding and increase waiting times, preventable costs, and resource consumption. In this context, the classification proto- col used by nurses is a widely accepted tool to identify priority patients. The Emergency Severity Index (ESI), Canadian Triage and Acuity Scale (CTAS), the Manchester Triage System (MTS) and French Clinical Classification of Emergency Patients (CCMU) are some examples of triage protocols frequently used worldwide [8-10].
Recently, there has been increased interest in develop- ing ED triage decision support systems based on big volumes of historical clinical data to differentiate and prioritize patients. Artificial intelligence (AI) and Machine learning (ML) provide a novel research area and have shown promising results. Conventional statistical models are based on pre-programmed rules derived from specific clinical predicators. On the other hand, ML prediction modeling use non-parametric algorithms that can incorporate a larger variety of complex predictors and maintain predictive perfor- mance. One of the most important advantages of ML- based methods is that they can identify patterns in the input data using algorithms, and then exploit the uncovered patterns to predict future data. It has been shown that ML can enhance the triage capacity [3, 11- 15] in order to rapidly screen patients and ensure their timely treatment in function of their condition. ML- based methods can reduce human errors, time and costs, and improve the quality of care services. Various studies have analyzed the impact of ML on ED triage with different prediction objectives, such as patients’ prioritization, critical illness, mortality, ED re-admission, ICU admission, ED length of stay, cardiac arrest and bacteremia, using the information available at triage [16-22]. The authors implemented one or more ML models and evaluated their prediction performance, in comparison with the conventional clinical prediction standards (e.g. ESI).
Other studies focused not only on the use of structured data, but also of the textual data generated (e.g. free textual notes by nurses or clinicians). The combination of Natural Language Processing (NLP) techniques for clinical notes and ML may further improve the predictive performance [16, 23–25]. Indeed, NLP, one of the main AI components, allows converting unstructured data, such as ED triage notes, into a set of quantitative parameters then can be used in ML- based systems [26]. The aim of this review was to assess the performance of recently described ML models used for patient triage in ED. This scoping review presents the variables, intelligent techniques, and performance measures used to develop these models and to evaluate their triage performance. We also compared the effect of including unstructured data in addition to conventional structured predictors. Lastly, we wanted to identify the future challenges of incorporating ML models in the ED workflow.
2. Method
2.1 Information sources and search strategy
The findings were reported following the Preferred Reporting Items for Systematic Reviews and Meta- Analyses (PRISMA) guidelines [27]. Four databases (ScienceDirect, PubMed, Google Scholar and SpringerLink) were manually searched using key words (“triage”, “emergency department”/“emergncy room”, “machine learning”, “modeling”, “model”, “classification”, “predictive”, “artificially intellige- nce”, “decision support systems”, “patient prioritiza- tion”) identified in the research questions , as done in previous studies [28-33]. Only studies published between 2018 and October 2021 were selected to assess recent developments in this thematic area.
Selection process and eligibility criteria Inclusion and exclusion criteria were defined to select relevant articles (Figure 1). Based on the abstract analysis, articles were selected if i) triage has taken place in the framework of emergency care; ii) ML was used to make predictions and the ML model perfor- mance was compared using evaluation metrics. Only studies that compared the different ML models, or one or more ML models with at least one standard triage method (e.g. clinician judgment, triage-based index score) were selected; iii) the prediction outcome included hospital admission and critical illness; other outcomes, such as mortality prediction, ED re-admis- sion, ICU admission, ED length of stay were
2.3 Data collection process
A checklist based on the Critical Appraisal and Data Extraction for Systematic Reviews of Prediction Modelling Studies (CHARMS) was established [34], and was completed with other information (e.g. programming language and modeling libraries).
2.4 Risk of bias assessment
The Prediction Model Risk of Bias Assessment Tool (PROBAST) was used to assess the risk of bias and the applicability of the included ML models [35]. This tool uses twenty signaling questions to assess four domains, and an overall judgement on the risk of bias and applicability.
Figure 1: Selection Criteria.
Abbreviations: ML Machine Learning, ICU Intensive Care Unit, LOS Length of Stay
3. Results
3.1 Study selection
Among the 2,010 unique articles identified using our electronic search strategy, 37 were identified for full- text review (Figure 2). Twenty-one articles published between 2018 and October 2021 were selected and analyzed in detail. Their characteristics are summarized in Table 1: seven studies were performed in the USA (one included data from USA and Portugal), three in Korea, two in the Netherlands, two in Australia, one in Northern Ireland, one in Israel, one in India, one in Brazil, one in Taiwan, one in Chile and Spain, and one in Ukraine and Canada.
3.2 Data sample and predictors
In all selected articles, the study population concerned patients visiting the ED, with the exception of the article by Kim et al. that focused on the prehospital environment [41]. Sample sizes varied from ~20,000 to ~3,000,000 individuals. Only the study by Olivia et al. [45] did not provide clear information on the sample size. Figure 3 summarizes the variables used to build the ML models in each study. Hong et al. [40] included 972 explanatory variables, Roquette et al. included 62 [10] and van Rein et al. 48 [48], while the other articles used fewer than 20 predictors. Although the data used for the ML model implementation were specific to each study, several common categories could be identified, such as demographic variables (age and sex), clinical variables (vital signs and diagnosis), arrival information (time and transport mode), ED visit outcome (hospital admission or discharge).
Most authors (17/21 articles) took into account a standard triage classification index, such as ESI. Half of the articles (11/21 articles) linked data to the common main complaints, and only the studies by Goto et al., Klug et al. and Chen et al. [16, 42, 50] included information on comorbidities. Less than half of the articles presented information on the use of hospital metrics (e.g. number of previous ED visits and number of previous hospitalizations). Hong et al. [40], Rendell et al. [47], Chen et al. [50], Roquette et al. [10] and Levin et al. [44] included the patients’ past medical history. Hong et al. [40], Roquette et al. [10] and De Hond et al. [37] added also information on historical laboratory test results, and imaging and electrocardiogram exams. Six articles investigated the role of NLP techniques to improve ED triage performance by including free textual triage notes. Sterling et al. [23] and Tahayori et al. [26] predicted disposition from the ED using only the triage text, while Chen et al. [50], Roquette et al. [10] and Choi et al. [13] combined structured predictors and unstru- ctured textual triage notes. Ivanov et al. [51] used information collected at triage in addition to the textual patient history to predict the patient priority- zation score, and compared the performance of their model to the ESI-based triage performed by nurses.
3.3 Machine learning process
Candidate variable handling and feature engineering: In the majority of the selected studies, all variables were included in the implemented models (Figure 4). Rendell et al. [47], Kwon et al. [43], Fernandes et [38] and Araz et al. [36] used Stepwise or Correlation-based methods for feature selection to reduce the number of input variables. When building a predictive model, it is often possible to improve its predictive performance by transforming variables. The most common transformation methods include categ- orization (e.g. bucketing, binning), interactions, and polynomial or spline transformation for numerical variables. Only Rendell et al. proposed predictor interaction features [47]. None of the authors used polynomial or spline transformation. Levin et al. [44] and Kim et al. [41] did not provide any clear information on the variables retained in their models.
Data resampling: In most articles, the datasets were randomly partitioned into training and test datasets (Table 1). The percentage of data contained in each dataset differed among studies (e.g. 90:10 in the study by Hong et al. [40], and 70:30 in the study by Raita et al. [46]). Levin et al. used the bootstrapping resampling technique [44]. Fourteen studies used the cross-validation method to validate the model perfor- mance or to tune hyperparameters, which helps to avoid the risk of overfitting or underfitting [52-53].
Prediction algorithms and calibration of hyperparameters: In total, 75 models were used to predict hospital admission or critical illness outcomes (Figure 5). Deep Neural Network and Logistic Regression (n=12/21 articles) were the two most widely used models, followed by Random Forest (n=11/21 articles) and Gradient Boosting models (n=10/21 studies). Some models were only used in one study: K-Nearest Neighbors (Rendell et al. [47]) and Random Under Sampling Boost (Fernandes et al. [38]). Among the used tools, R and Python were the most common, followed by Java, MATLAB and the SQL language. Only 11/21 articles included infor- mation on calibration of at least one hyperparameter, depending on the method used [10, 16, 23, 36-40, 46, 49, 51].
Evaluation metrics: The metrics used to evaluate the performance of the different models (Figure 6) included the F1 score, the receiver operating characteristic-area under the curve (ROC-AUC), sen- sitivity and specificity, and accuracy. The sensitivity and specificity and ROC-AUC metrics were the most used.
Model agnostic methods: Most authors used Logistic Regression coefficients to identify significant variables. For models that cannot be interpreted directly, such as Random Forests, Gradient Boosting and Neural Networks, the Permutation Feature Import- ance model-agnostic method was used in eight studies to identify the variables that most contributed to discrimination [16, 37-38, 40-42, 44, 46]. This method assesses the predictor importance by measuring the increase of the prediction error when the feature values are
3.4 Model performance assessment
Hospitalization outcome: In the selected studies, 60 models were developed (Table 1) with hospital admission as outcome. Figure 7 illustrates the performance of the prediction models based on the C- statistic method (AUC). Gradient Boosting was the most discriminant (median AUC = 0.863 and interquartile ranges (IQR) = 0.859-0.891), compared with Logistic Regression (median AUC = 0.845, IQR = 0.806-0.887), Lasso-ElasticNet (median AUC = 0.825, IQR = 0.818-0.833) and Single Layer Neural Networks (median AUC = 0.825, IQR = 0.820-0.830), and also Deep Neural Networks and K-Nearest Neighbors (median AUC = 0.822 for both, IQR = 0.795-0.876 and 0.815-0.850, respectively).
Critical illness: Fifteen models used critical illness as outcome measure (Figure 8). Deep Neural
Networks displayed the best performance in differentiating between patients with and without a critical illness (median AUC = 0.875, IQR = 0.857- 0.895), followed by Random Forest (median AUC = 0.870, IQR = 0.850-0.881), Logistic Regression (median AUC = 0.851, IQR = 0.846-0.860), andp Gradient Boosting (median AUC = 0.840, only one model).
Natural language processing: Bag-of-words (BOW), term frequency-inverse document frequency (TF-IDF), word embedding [54], and paragraph vectors [55] were common NLP techniques used to transform free text into numerical variables [50]. Serling et [23] and Tahayori et al. [26] used NLP to process the free text of the nurses’ triage notes, independently of other clinical variables, to predict patient outcomes. Serling et al. [23] tested three common NLP techniques: BOW, word embedding, and paragraph vectors. Model training and validation were performed using Deep Learning for Java (DL4J). They found that the best prediction for hospital admission were obtained with paragraph vectors (AUC = 0.785, 95% CI = 0.782 - 0.788). Tahayori et al. [26] used the Bidirectional Encoder Represe- ntations from Transformers model and obtained an AUC of 0.88 for predicting hospital admission. Ivanov et al. used the C-NLP method from the OpenNLP Java library to extract medical historical data. They found that when using the NLP information, accuracy of predicting ED disposition was 26.9% higher than the mean nurse accuracy (75.7% versus 59.8%) (P <.001). Chen et al. compared the prediction performance of only structured predictors, of only clinical narratives recorded following the Subjective, Objective, Assessment, and Plan (SOAP) method, and of the combination of structured data and unstructured texts. They showed that the third option gave the best prediction metric. Figure 9 shows the performance of the different models with and without NLP techniques. Roquette et al and Choi et al did the same analysis using free triage notes instead of SOAP notes, and concluded that the addition of nursing triage text data improved the prediction performance of all the studied models.
Figure 2: Flow diagram of database search and final selection.
Abbreviations: ML Machine Learning, ICU Intensive Care Unit, LOS Length of Stay
Table 1: Characteristics of the selected articles.
For each article, the included variables are shown by a green diamond. Variables that were not included (or not available) and variables for which no clear information was found are shown with red and gray diamonds, respectively.
Figure 3: Predictors/candidate variables included in the selected articles.
Figure 4: Candidate variable handling and feature engineering for model building in the different studies. Green diamond, yes; red circle with a cross, no; gray circle with a cross, no clear information.
Figure 5: Algorithms used in the selected studies. Green diamond, algorithm used in that study; red circle, not used in that study.
Abbreviations: PR AUC area under the precision recall curve, ROC AUC area under the receiver operating characteristics curve, PPV positive predictive value, NPV negative predictive value.
Figure 6: Evaluation metrics used in the included studies.
Figure 7: C-statistics of the algorithms used to predict hospitalization.
Figure 8: C-statistics of the algorithms used to predict critical illness.
Abbreviations: DNN Deep Neural Networks, GB Gradient Boosting, LR Logistic Regression, RF Random Forest
Figure 9: C-statistics of the algorithms with and without NLP techniques.
4. Discussion
The objective of these studies that developed ED triage algorithms was to propose decision support systems to help health professionals to prioritize high- risk patients. As mentioned in previous review articles [16, 36, 38-40, 41, 43-44, 46], the reference standard on which ED triage is currently based, such as the ESI, can hardly recognize critically ill patients. Indeed, it is hard to deal with such detailed data on the little time available. Advanced AI models based on big volumes of historical clinical data may allow overcoming this obstacle. The aim of the present review was to identify the tools needed to build robust and efficient prediction algorithms that offer higher discrimination performance than the reference standard models. The twenty-one recent and most cited studies from 2018 to
October 2021, selected for this review, described ML- based decision support systems to improve patient triage in ED. Two outcomes were selected: hospital admission and critical illness. The most common methods were Gradient Boosting (17 models), followed by Random Forest, Logistic Regression and Deep Neural Networks (15 models/each).
The objective of this review was not only to describe the developed methods and techniques, but also to identify possible improvements. A common problem with the selected studies was that they did not describe in detail or did not report their feature engineering process. Only one study mentioned that they took into account the predictor interactions [47]. No study explained how they would model non-linear numerical predictors and non-linear relationships (e.g. poly- nomials or splines). Furthermore, nine of the included studies mentioned that they took into account the hyperparameter calibration [16, 36-40, 46]. However, the majority did not explain the rationale behind the choice of calibration method and did not include the results of this analysis. Yet, the calibration result analysis might be crucial during the development of a transportable model that needs to be adapted to new settings [15, 56-58]. Many authors mentioned the necessity to offer the widest possible range of predic- tion approaches. For example, Rendell et al. high- lighted the different advantages of each ML algorithm and emphasized that these algorithms overcome the limitations of more traditional regression techniques by offering both linear and non-linear decision forms. However, in our selected studies, only two studies implemented six models [10, 36], and most proposed only three to four prediction algorithms.
In all selected studies (n=21), the ED triage outcome was imbalanced in terms of the two disposition classes (hospital admission or not, and critical illness or not). However, only two articles (Wolff et al. [49] and Tarayori et al. [26]) balanced the dataset by over- sampling the minority class to avoid naive results with ‘high accuracy’. Future works could include system- atically this step in the ML-based ED triage workflow. The studies on NLP contribution to ED triage performance showed that the addition of textual data enhanced the prediction performance of all studied models, even when using minimal text preprocessing [10, 13, 50]. This suggests that some information included in unstructured data is not captured by the conventional structured triage predictors, even with the minimal text preprocessing. The interest of more recent NLP techniques, such as recurrent neural networks and convolutional neural networks, for textual data could be explored in future studies [13].
Lastly, model-agnostic interpretation methods help to understand how features can affect the model predi- ction. They are flexible and can be applied to any ML model to find new patterns and to know more about the dataset [59-61]. In the selected studies, the authors used exclusively the Permutation Feature Importance method to identify relevant features. Other methods, such as Partial Dependence Plot, Accumulated Local Effect Plots, Feature interaction (H-statistic), Funct- ional Decomposition, and Global Surrogate Models, could be investigated in future works to identify predictors that might affect the patient triage prediction [59]. Predictive modeling can be useful for human triage as a support tool because expertise in ED triage requires significant training and may be limited in resource-constrained contexts. A support tool based on ML and NLP may be more robust to accurately assess and classify severe symptoms, with the aim of identifying the patients who need rapid treatment in ED.
5. Conclusion
This review found that combining ML with historical clinical data for patient triage in ED has a clear advantage over the reference standard currently in use. However, there is still scope for improvement to enhance the prediction performance and explicability of ML models: 1) integration of predictors’ intera- ctions and non-linear relationships; 2) precise infor- mation on hyperparameter calibration to make models more transportable; 3) correction of unbalanced datasets using the oversampling method; 4) testing more advanced NLP techniques to convert free text into numerical representation, and 5) more studies on the different model-agnostic interpretation methods to identify predictors that affect the triage process. The goal is to optimize the patient flow in order to improve their management, reduce waiting time, and efficiently use resources [62-63].
Declarations
Ethics approval and consent to participate
Not applicable
Consent for publication
Not applicable
Availability of data and material
All data generated or analyzed during this study are included in this published article. If readers need supplementary information, they can contact me (fei.gao@ehesp.fr).
Competing interests
The authors declare that they have no competing interests.
Funding
Not applicable.
Authors’ contributions
FG designed the project, performed the statistical analysis and drafted the manuscript. SD supervised the overall project, oversaw the statistical analysis, and helped to draft and revised the manuscript. CL, KK and MG performed the statistical analysis with FG and SD. BB gave important suggestions to this study. All authors interpreted the data and reviewed the manuscript for important intellectual content. All authors have read and approved the final version of the manuscript.
Acknowledgements
This research is supported by EHESP Rennes, Univ Rennes, EHESP, CNRS, Inserm, Arènes - UMR 6051, RSMS - U 1309, ECAMO, Hoptial Bichât - APHP and ENSAI. Points of view or opinions in this article are those of the authors and do not necessarily represent the official position or policies of the EHESP Rennes, UMR 6051, RSMS - U 1309, ECAMO, Hoptial Bichât- APHP and ENSAI.
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