AI_PREMie: saving lives of mothers and babies using AI
Monday, 28 February, 2022
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Summary
Preeclampsia is a serious pregnancy complication typically characterised by the development of high blood pressure and protein in the urine, and it affects one in every 10 pregnancies. Every year it claims the lives of 50,000 mothers and 500,000 babies, making it one of the world’s deadliest pregnancy complications.
Diagnosis remains a serious challenge, and pre-term delivery of the baby is the only cure and the safest option for the mother. Therefore, an additional 5 million babies are born prematurely each year – sometimes very prematurely – which poses its own risks for the survival chances and long-term health of the child. Accurate risk stratification, where patients are assigned health risk statuses to help inform care, is urgently required to reduce these enormous competing risks.
Professor Maguire and her team have drawn upon cutting-edge biomedical, clinical and machine-learning knowhow to develop a prototype risk stratification tool, AI_PREMie, for preeclampsia. Their solution will be able to assist clinical decision making in real-time, hopefully enabling more accurate diagnosis and personalised treatment that will save lives.
Research description
Using their knowledge of platelets (tiny blood cells that help the body form clots and stop bleeding), Professor Maguire and her team have spent the past six years developing a new platelet-based technology platform called PALADINTM to reinvent how to find diagnostics in the blood.
They have used PALADINTM to uncover a combination of patent-pending ”biomarkers” (molecules in the blood) that have shown great promise in diagnosing preeclampsia, one of the world’s deadliest pregnancy complications. This test also includes markers which may be useful in separating women who will progress to severe disease from those who will remain stable.
Recently, using powerful machine-learning algorithms, they have combined these unique biochemical signals with clinical data to develop a new prototype test, AI_PREMie.
In preliminary findings, the team have compelling evidence that AI_PREMie can accurately diagnose preeclampsia, which can be incredibly challenging even for experienced medical staff. AI_PREMie may also be useful towards predicting whether a woman will progress to severe, permitting a more accurate timing of delivery, and potentially allowing a baby to remain in utero for several more precious hours or days, impacting their survival chances and long-term health.
In the future, by performing their analysis using standard equipment in the hospital lab as well as ‘in the cloud’, the team believe that AI_PREMie will return an easily interpretable risk score within a few hours, aiding clinical decision-making in real-time. Furthermore, as they plan to use advanced cloud technology, AI_PREMie will continually learn and evolve once it is implemented into widespread clinical practice.
It is hoped that AI_PREMie will arm clinical care providers with an affordable risk stratification tool to closely observe pregnancies complicated by preeclampsia, and will help to prevent unnecessary adverse outcomes for mother and baby.
The impact of AI_PREMie will be a game changer in tackling preeclampsia. As a clinician, I cannot wait to use it as part of our care.
— Professor Mary Higgins, UCD School of Medicine & National Maternity Hospital, Dublin
Research impact
Addressing a global health challenge
Maternal health is a significant global and national challenge. Professor Maguire and her team have combined their extensive knowledge to provide a prototype personalised treatment tool that will hopefully enable timely delivery decisions, which would transform the lives of pregnant mothers, their babies, their families and their extended communities.
Improving quality of life in this way aligns to the priorities of several Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs): SDG3 (Good Health and Well-Being), SDG5 (Gender Equality), and SDG10 (Reducing Inequality). This is not only a moral imperative but critical for maintaining international growth.
A (opens in a new window)2015 WHO report acknowledges that many maternal and infant deaths are preventable and in theory could be avoided with effective and timely clinical interventions. The key is to ensure that high-risk pregnancies and complications are recognised early. Thus, new diagnostics are urgently required, and AI_PREMie will fill this gap. Any significant innovations in maternal healthcare will help reduce global maternal and newborn mortality rates.
Health impact
By providing a timely and accurate prognosis, AI_PREMie will be a game-changer for women with preeclampsia and should have a major impact on the health and mortality rates of pregnant women and their babies worldwide. Every year, preeclampsia claims the lives of 50,000 mothers and 500,000 babies. The team hope to deploy AI_PREMie globally within the few years and believe that within 5 years of deployment, the method will become part of pregnancy screening programs worldwide.
Survivors of preeclampsia have a lifelong increased risk of developing other chronic diseases, such as heart and vascular disease. In fact, preeclampsia is associated with a fourfold increased risk of developing kidney failure within 10 years after pregnancy. This risk is increased even further by having more than one preeclamptic pregnancy, a low-birthweight offspring, or a preterm delivery. Therefore, any improvement in clinical decision-making will have an enormous preventative potential on the long-term health of the population and future healthcare resource requirements.
It is difficult to sometimes know what to do: whether to deliver a baby because we fear for the mother’s safety or to keep baby in-utero for as long as possible.
— Dr Jennifer Donnelly, Consultant Obstetrician, Rotunda Hospital
Social impact
The team have raised public awareness of preeclampsia and their prototype solution through a range of public engagement activities, links to which are available in the References section below. This includes traditional media (several TV shows, articles in national papers, and opinion pieces by medical journals) as well as more modern approaches (such as reaching out directly to affected women and their families through their hashtags #myPETexperience and #AI_PREMie on Twitter).
This dual approach has received a wide response from the patients and families affected by preeclampsia who spoke of their devastating memories of the condition:
“Brilliant! As a mother who had Preeclampsia at 29 weeks and delivered 6 weeks early, this is to be commended.”
“This amazing team of women are developing a blood test to predict preeclampsia. They listened to my story about losing my daughter Aoife and made me feel a part of their research. On #WorldPreeclampsiaDay2021 I'd like to say thank you to @maguirepatr and to the UCD team.”
Furthermore, three invention disclosure forms and a patent application have been filed because of the scientific research work at the heart of AI_PREMie. The biomarkers underlying this solution were also awarded the UCD NOVA Invention of the year 2021 for their significance in preeclampsia diagnosis and the real prospect of saving lives.
Research team
Professor Patricia Maguire, UCD School of Biomolecular and Biomedical Science Principal Investigator / Team Lead
Professor Fionnuala Ní Áinle, UCD School of Medicine and Consultant Haematologist, Rotunda Hospital, Dublin Team Co-Lead
Professor Mary Higgins, UCD School of Medicine and Consultant Obstetrician, National Maternity Hospital, Dublin Societal Impact Champion
Dr Jennifer Donnelly, UCD School of Medicine and Consultant Obstetrician, Rotunda Hospital Clinical acumen, patient sample collection, smart data collection
Dr Neil O’Gorman, Consultant Obstetrician, Coombe Hospital Clinical acumen, patient sample collection, smart data collection
Dr John O’Loughlin, Laboratory Manager, Rotunda Hospital Hospital laboratory acumen, test design
Dr Paulina Szklanna, Manager, UCD AI Healthcare Hub and Research Scientist, UCD School of Biomolecular and Biomedical Science Biochemical analysis, data analysis, data interpretation
Associate Professor Brian Mac Namee, UCD School of Computer Science Artificial Intelligence, data science, data interpretation
Dr Suzy Whoriskey, UCD School of Mathematics and Statistics Statistical data analytics, data organisation, data interpretation
Dr Katrina Comerford, Research Scientist, UCD School of Biomolecular and Biomedical Science Project Management
Ana Le Chevelier, Research Assistant, UCD School of Biomolecular and Biomedical Science Biochemical analysis
Ella Fouhy, Research Assistant, UCD School of Biomolecular and Biomedical Science Smart data organisation, biochemical analysis
Saraswathi Rajakumar, Research Assistant, UCD School of Biomolecular and Biomedical Science Smart data organisation, biochemical analysis
Industry collaborators
John Curran, Head of Technology, SAS Ireland Artificial Intelligence, data integration, model deployment
Kevin Marshall, Head of Education, Microsoft Ireland Cloud framework and software integration
Funding
The project commenced in 2015 and was funded through the Health Research Board and Irish Research Council
In July 2021, the team were awarded Runner Up Prize of €500K in the SFI AI for Societal Good award