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📄 ResearchJuly 6, 2026

Emergency Department Presenting Concerns Among Admissions With Hypercapnia: A Retrospective NLP Study of MIMIC-IV

Background Hypercapnia may indicate a primary ventilatory syndrome, a complication of another illness, or an epiphenomenon of severe disease. The presenting context of hypercapnia is poorly quantified, limiting clinical interpretation and synthesis of epidemiologic studies. Methods We performed a retrospective cross-sectional study of Medical Information Mart for Intensive Care IV (MIMIC-IV) hospital admissions linked to an emergency department (ED) presentation from 2011 through 2019. Admissions were included if the triage chief complaint was not missing and at least one prespecified criterion for hypercapnia was met: an International Classification of Diseases (ICD) code for hypercapnic respiratory failure or obesity hypoventilation syndrome, arterial blood gas (ABG) PCO2 45 mmHg, venous blood gas (VBG) PCO2 50 mmHg, or indeterminate-source blood gas PCO2 50 mmHg. Triage chief-complaint text was classified by natural language processing (NLP) into 17 National Hospital Ambulatory Medical Care Survey reason-for-visit (RFV) categories using a multi-label framework. Primary analyses estimated admission-level RFV category prevalences; secondary analyses compared distributions by overlapping ascertainment indicator, age, and acidemia. Results The total cohort included 11,941 admissions: 1,542 (12.9%) met both blood-gas and ICD-code criteria, 9,958 (83.4%) met blood-gas criteria only, and 441 (3.7%) met ICD-code criteria only. Median age at admission was 68 years (IQR 56-78), and 6,423 admissions (53.8%) were for male patients. Respiratory RFV categories were most prevalent (30.2%), followed by administrative reasons (17.5%), digestive symptoms (14.0%), injuries and adverse effects (14.0%), and nervous-system symptoms (13.8%); categories were not mutually exclusive. Respiratory categories were more common in ICD-positive admissions (50.2%) than in VBG-defined (36.3%) or ABG-defined admissions (27.3%). Injuries and adverse effects were most prevalent among admissions for patients aged 18-39 years (34.4%), whereas respiratory categories increased from 13.7% among admissions for patients aged 18-39 years to 36.5% among admissions for patients aged 80 years. NLP-derived classifications showed mean set-F1 of 0.84 against adjudicated clinician labels in the full annotated benchmark sample. Conclusions Among ED-linked admissions with hypercapnia by diagnosis code, blood gas, or both, respiratory complaints were the most common chief-complaint category but represented fewer than one-third of admissions. Presentation context should be incorporated when defining, comparing, and interpreting hypercapnia cohorts, particularly those ascertained by blood-gas criteria.

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Source

https://www.medrxiv.org/content/10.64898/2026.07.03.26357242v1?rss=1