Accurate prediction of postoperative complications can inform shared
decisions between patients and surgeons regarding the appropriateness of
surgery, preoperative risk-reduction strategies, and postoperative resource
use. Traditional predictive analytic tools are hindered by suboptimal
performance and usability. We hypothesized that novel deep learning techniques
would outperform logistic regression models in predicting postoperative
complications. In a single-center longitudinal cohort of 43,943 adult patients
undergoing 52,529 major inpatient surgeries, deep learning yielded greater
discrimination than logistic regression for all nine complications. Predictive
performance was strongest when leveraging the full spectrum of preoperative and
intraoperative physiologic time-series electronic health record data. A single
multi-task deep learning model yielded greater performance than separate models
trained on individual complications. Integrated gradients interpretability
mechanisms demonstrated the substantial importance of missing data.
Interpretable, multi-task deep neural networks made accurate, patient-level
predictions that harbor the potential to augment surgical decision-making