PRESS-NEWS.org - Press Release Distribution
PRESS RELEASES DISTRIBUTION

Artificial Intelligence may help save lives in ICUs

A new AI-based tool proves effective in assessing individual risk in severe cases of community-acquired pneumonia in Intensive Care Units (ICUs)

2025-11-18
(Press-News.org) A study published in the Journal of Critical Care, conducted with the participation of the D’Or Institute for Research and Education (IDOR), investigated how to measure efficiency in the use of resources for patients with severe community-acquired pneumonia (CAP), an illness contracted outside hospital settings and most common among older adults.

Severe CAP represents one of the greatest challenges for ICUs. It requires complex resources, ranging from prolonged hospitalizations to respiratory support, directly affecting hospitals’ ability to deliver quality care. Despite its relevance, traditional methods of evaluating hospital performance do not always take patient severity into account, which undermines fair comparisons between institutions and hinders more effective management strategies.

Risk-adjusted care
To address this problem, researchers tested the Standardized Length of Stay Ratio (SLOSR), a tool developed with machine learning techniques, a branch of Artificial Intelligence. The aim was to determine whether SLOSR could predict, in a patient risk–adjusted way, the appropriate length of ICU stay. This would allow for more accurate comparisons across hospitals, highlighting both overuse and underuse of resources.

The study was retrospective and multicenter, analyzing 16,985 adult CAP admissions in 220 ICUs across 57 Brazilian hospitals during 2023. Variables such as age, comorbidities, need for mechanical ventilation, and disease severity were taken into account.

A machine learning model was applied to predict expected length of stay, allowing researchers to calculate the SLOSR as the ratio between observed and predicted times. To ensure robustness, they performed strict statistical validation, including calibration plots, cross-validation, and error metrics, confirming the model’s alignment with clinical reality.

Key findings
Median length of stay was four days, and approximately 28% of patients required ventilatory support. The model showed strong explanatory power with low prediction errors, reinforcing SLOSR’s potential as a reliable indicator of resource efficiency across ICUs.

The study demonstrates that SLOSR could be a valuable tool for hospitals and healthcare managers, enabling ICU performance evaluation adjusted for patient severity. This approach helps identify where resources are being used efficiently and where waste may be occurring. Researchers, however, note that further investigations are needed to test the method’s applicability in other contexts, such as different countries and healthcare systems.

END


ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:

Uncovering how cells build tissues and organs

2025-11-18
Growing from a single cell into a complex organism with specialized tissues and organs requires a complex and coordinated process. But the mechanical signals that guide tissue and organ development—cells pushing, pulling, compressing, and swelling against one another and their environment—remain mysterious. Researchers from the University of Rochester’s Department of Biomedical Engineering will shed new light on tissue and organ development by studying how cells interact mechanically with the extracellular matrix, a biological polymer produced by cells that acts like scaffolding for building more complicated structures. Assistant Professor Marisol ...

Bigger datasets aren’t always better

2025-11-18
Cambridge, MA -- Determining the least expensive path for a new subway line underneath a metropolis like New York City is a colossal planning challenge — involving thousands of potential routes through hundreds of city blocks, each with uncertain construction costs. Conventional wisdom suggests extensive field studies across many locations would be needed to determine the costs associated with digging below certain city blocks. Because these studies are costly to conduct, a city planner would want to perform as few as possible while still gathering the most useful data for making an optimal decision. With ...

AI at the heart of new SFU gel-free ECG system for faster diagnoses

2025-11-18
A new heart monitoring system combining 3D printing and artificial intelligence could transform the way doctors measure and diagnose patients' heart health. Developed at SFU’s School of Mechatronic Systems Engineering, the system features reusable dry 3D-printed electrodes embedded in a soft chest belt – the folding origami-shaped design uses gentle suction to stick to the skin. Carbon-based ink printed on the suction cup replaces electrolyte gel, conducting the heart’s electrical signals through to a wearable ...

“Cellular Big Brother”: 3D model with human cells allows real-time observation of brain metastases and paves the way for new treatments

2025-11-18
Using human cells and cutting-edge technology, the team created a three-dimensional (3D) model that accurately simulates the brain invaded by aggressive cancer. Published in Biofabrication, the study combines frontier science, advanced technology, and international collaboration — while also carrying a personal story: part of the team is formed by a couple of scientists who quite literally bring their work home. Brain metastasis occurs when cancer cells migrate from the original tumor — in this case, the skin — to the brain. This stage of the disease is among the most challenging to treat, and it is associated with over 90% of cancer-related deaths. “When melanoma ...

Teaching large language models how to absorb new knowledge

2025-11-18
CAMBRIDGE, MA -- In an MIT classroom, a professor lectures while students diligently write down notes they will reread later to study and internalize key information ahead of an exam. Humans know how to learn new information, but large language models can’t do this in the same way. Once a fully trained LLM has been deployed, its “brain” is static and can’t permanently adapt itself to new knowledge. This means that if a user tells an LLM something important today, it won’t remember ...

Milestone on the road to the ‘quantum internet’

2025-11-18
Everyday life on the internet is insecure. Hackers can break into bank accounts or steal digital identities. Driven by AI, attacks are becoming increasingly sophisticated. Quantum cryptography promises more effective protection. It makes communication secure against eavesdropping by relying on the laws of quantum physics. However, the path toward a quantum internet is still fraught with technical hurdles. Researchers at the Institute of Semiconductor Optics and Functional Interfaces (IHFG) at the University of Stuttgart have now made a decisive breakthrough in one of the most technically challenging components, the ‘quantum repeater’. They report their results in Nature Communications ...

Blink to the beat

2025-11-18
Yi Du and colleagues from the Chinese Academy of Sciences published an article in the open access journal PLOS Biology on November 18th detailing their findings about a new way our bodies naturally respond to music. Given a steady beat, our eyes blink in synchrony. The neurological process that helps us move with the music is known as auditory-motor synchronization. This describes the way you tap your foot along with the radio or bob your head at a concert, or why some runners listen to songs with a specific number of beats per minute ...

Even low-intensity smoking increases risk of heart attack and death

2025-11-18
An analysis of data from almost two dozen long-term studies finds that even low-intensity smokers have a substantially higher risk of heart disease and death compared to people who never smoked, even years after they quit. Michael Blaha of the Johns Hopkins Ciccarone Center for Prevention of Cardiovascular Disease, USA, and colleagues report these findings November 18th in the open-access journal PLOS Medicine. Previous research has shown that smoking cigarettes increases a person’s risk of developing cardiovascular disease, but the exact relationship between how heavily a ...

Research on intelligent analysis method for dynamic response of onshore wind turbines

2025-11-18
Researchers have developed a high-fidelity 13-degree-of-freedom nonlinear model and an intelligent algorithm for wind turbine dynamic analysis. This framework accurately captures complex tower-blade interactions, including often-neglected torsional effects, achieving a remarkable agreement with high-fidelity benchmarks. Published in Smart Construction, this work provides a powerful and efficient tool for structural assessment and future optimization of large-scale wind energy systems. The global push for sustainable energy has cemented wind power's role in the renewable transition. However, designing safe and cost-effective ...

Type 1 diabetes cured in mice with gentle blood stem-cell and pancreatic islet transplant

2025-11-18
A combination blood stem cell and pancreatic islet cell transplant from an immunologically mismatched donor completely prevented or cured Type 1 diabetes in mice in a study by Stanford Medicine researchers. Type 1 diabetes arises when the immune system mistakenly destroys insulin-producing islet cells in the pancreas. None of the animals developed graft-versus-host disease — in which the immune system arising from the donated blood stem cells attacks healthy tissue in the recipient — and the destruction of islet cells by the native host immune system was halted. After the transplants, the animals did not require the use of the immune suppressive drugs ...

LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:

Gene silencing may slow down bladder cancer

Most people with a genetic condition that causes significantly high cholesterol go undiagnosed, Mayo Clinic study finds

The importance of standardized international scores for intensive care

Almost half of Oregon elk population carries advantageous genetic variant against CWD, study shows

Colorectal cancer screenings remain low for people ages 45 to 49 despite guideline change

Artificial Intelligence may help save lives in ICUs

Uncovering how cells build tissues and organs

Bigger datasets aren’t always better

AI at the heart of new SFU gel-free ECG system for faster diagnoses

“Cellular Big Brother”: 3D model with human cells allows real-time observation of brain metastases and paves the way for new treatments

Teaching large language models how to absorb new knowledge

Milestone on the road to the ‘quantum internet’

Blink to the beat

Even low-intensity smoking increases risk of heart attack and death

Research on intelligent analysis method for dynamic response of onshore wind turbines

Type 1 diabetes cured in mice with gentle blood stem-cell and pancreatic islet transplant

Serida sequences the first complete genome of the Faba Granja Asturiana, a key advance for its genetic improvement and conservation

New clues reveal how gestational diabetes affects offspring

Study finds longer, more consistent addiction medication use among youth sharply lowers risk of overdose, hospitalization

Combating climate change with better semiconductor manufacturing

Evaluation of a state-level incentive program to improve diet

Breakthrough study shows how cancer cells ‘break through’ tight tissue gaps

Researchers build bone marrow model entirely from human cells

$3.7 million in NIH funding for research into sand flies, vectors of parasitic disease leishmaniasis, goes to UNC Greensboro

Researchers enhance durability of pure water-fed anion exchange membrane electrolysis

How growth hormone excess accelerates liver aging via glycation stress

State-of-the-art multimodal imaging and therapeutic strategies in radiation-induced brain injury

Updates in chronic subdural hematoma: from epidemiology, pathogenesis, and diagnosis to treatment

Team studies beryllium-7 variations over Antarctic regions of the Southern Ocean

SwRI identifies security vulnerability in EV charging protocol

[Press-News.org] Artificial Intelligence may help save lives in ICUs
A new AI-based tool proves effective in assessing individual risk in severe cases of community-acquired pneumonia in Intensive Care Units (ICUs)