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The approach was evaluated in a case study on bronchiolitis using 33,176 discharge letters of children admitted to 44 emergency rooms or hospitals in the Veneto Region, Italy, between 2017 and 2020. The best weakly supervised model achieved an AUROC of 77.68% ($\pm4.30\%$), an AUPRC of 73.13% ($\pm4.93\%$), and an F1-score of 78.14% ($\pm4.89\%$) against manually annotated data. Performance surpassed unsupervised baselines and approached fully supervised models, while reducing the need for manual annotation by more than 1,500 hours for a dataset of this size. Similar model rankings were observed in a secondary validation on a smaller bronchitis dataset (3,188 discharge letters, 2020-2025), where the best weakly supervised model achieved an AUPRC of 76.72% ($\pm 5.02\%$).
These results suggest the potential of weakly supervised NLP methods for scalable disease identification from clinical discharge letters.
From: Vittorio Torri [view email]
[v1]
Sat, 19 Oct 2024 09:42:20 UTC (1,741 KB)
[v2]
Tue, 30 Dec 2025 21:34:16 UTC (2,405 KB)
[v3]
Fri, 12 Jun 2026 13:21:02 UTC (4,336 KB)
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