Enhancing and personalising endometriosis care with causal machine learning
Date
20/12/2024Keywords
Metadata
Show full item recordAltmetrics Handle Statistics
Altmetrics DOI Statistics
Abstract
Endometriosis poses significant challenges in diagnosis and management due to the wide range of varied symptoms and systemic implications. Integrating machine learning into healthcare screening processes can significantly enhance and optimise resource allocation and diagnostic efficiency, and facilitate more tailored and personalised treatment plans. This paper discusses the potential of leveraging patient-reported symptom data through causal machine learning to advance endometriosis care and reduce the lengthy diagnostic delays associated with this condition. The goal is to propose a novel personalised non-invasive diagnostic approach that understands the underlying causes of patient symptoms and combines health records and other factors to enhance prediction accuracy, providing an approach that can be utilised globally.
Citation
Hine , A A , Webber , T & Kuster Filipe Bowles , J 2024 , Enhancing and personalising endometriosis care with causal machine learning . in N Naik , P Jenkins , S Prajapat & P Grace (eds) , Contributions presented at The international conference on computing, communication, cybersecurity & AI, July 3–4, 2024, London, UK : The C3AI 2024 . Lecture notes in networks and systems , Springer , Cham , pp. 3-25 , The International Conference on Computing, Communication, Cybersecurity & AI (The C3AI) , London , United Kingdom , 3/07/24 . https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-031-74443-3_1 conference
Publication
Contributions presented at The international conference on computing, communication, cybersecurity & AI, July 3–4, 2024, London, UK
ISSN
2367-3370Type
Conference item
Rights
Copyright © 2024 the Authors. This work has been made available online in accordance with the Rights Retention Strategy. This accepted manuscript is distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are credited. The final published version of this work is available at https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-031-74443-3_1.
Description
Funding: Bowles is partially supported by the Austrian Funding Council (FWF) under Meitner M 3338-N.Collections
Items in the St Andrews Research Repository are protected by copyright, with all rights reserved, unless otherwise indicated.