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1.
J Biomed Inform ; 49: 282-91, 2014 Jun.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-24680984

RESUMO

Although MedDRA has obvious advantages over previous terminologies for coding adverse drug reactions and discovering potential signals using data mining techniques, its terminological organization constrains users to search terms according to predefined categories. Adding formal definitions to MedDRA would allow retrieval of terms according to a case definition that may correspond to novel categories that are not currently available in the terminology. To achieve semantic reasoning with MedDRA, we have associated formal definitions to MedDRA terms in an OWL file named OntoADR that is the result of our first step for providing an "ontologized" version of MedDRA. MedDRA five-levels original hierarchy was converted into a subsumption tree and formal definitions of MedDRA terms were designed using several methods: mappings to SNOMED-CT, semi-automatic definition algorithms or a fully manual way. This article presents the main steps of OntoADR conception process, its structure and content, and discusses problems and limits raised by this attempt to "ontologize" MedDRA.


Assuntos
Efeitos Colaterais e Reações Adversas Relacionados a Medicamentos , Semântica , Terminologia como Assunto , Systematized Nomenclature of Medicine
2.
Stud Health Technol Inform ; 180: 534-8, 2012.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-22874248

RESUMO

A major barrier to repurposing routinely collected data for clinical research is the heterogeneity of healthcare information systems. Electronic Healthcare Record for Clinical Research (EHR4CR) is a European platform designed to improve the efficiency of conducting clinical trials. In this paper, we propose an initial architecture of the EHR4CR Semantic Interoperability Framework. We used a model-driven engineering approach to build a reference HL7-based multidimensional model bound to a set of reference clinical terminologies acting as a global as view model. We then conducted an evaluation of its expressiveness for patient eligibility. The EHR4CR information model consists in one fact table dedicated to clinical statement and 4 dimensions. The EHR4CR terminology integrates reference terminologies used in patient care (e.g LOINC, ICD-10, SNOMED CT, etc). We used the Object Constraint Language (OCL) to represent patterns of eligibility criteria as constraints on the EHR4CR model to be further transformed in SQL statements executed on different clinical data warehouses.


Assuntos
Pesquisa Biomédica/normas , Registros Eletrônicos de Saúde/normas , Registros de Saúde Pessoal , Armazenamento e Recuperação da Informação/normas , Terminologia como Assunto , Nível Sete de Saúde , Internacionalidade , Guias de Prática Clínica como Assunto
3.
Stud Health Technol Inform ; 180: 164-8, 2012.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-22874173

RESUMO

The French coding system of surgical procedures, the Classification Commune des Actes Médicaux (CCAM), is used in France for DRG databases and fee for services payment. Mapping between CCAM and other clinical procedures terminologies by the means of UMLS metathesaurus is essential in order to increase semantic interoperability between different healthcare terminologies and between different case mix systems. In a previous work the CISMeF team used an automatic approach to map CCAM descriptors to the French part of the UMLS metathesaurus. In another way for the French funded research project InterSTIS, we performed a mapping using MetaMap based on the top level semantic structure descriptors of anatomy and action of CCAM translated from French to English. This paper aims to present this new approach and to compare the results with the previous one. The combination of both approaches significantly improved the coverage of the mapping to 68 % for both descriptors and 95 % for at least one descriptor.


Assuntos
Armazenamento e Recuperação da Informação/métodos , Processamento de Linguagem Natural , Reconhecimento Automatizado de Padrão/métodos , Semântica , Terminologia como Assunto , Tradução , Unified Medical Language System , França
4.
Stud Health Technol Inform ; 160(Pt 1): 518-22, 2010.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-20841741

RESUMO

OBJECTIVES: To assess and understand adverse drug reactions (ADRs), a systematic review of reference databases like Pubmed is a necessary and mandatory step in Pharmacovigilance. In order to assist pharmacovigilance team with a computerized tool, we performed a comparative study of 4 different approaches to query Pubmed through ADR-drug terms. The aim of this study is to assess how an ontology of adverse effects, used to normalize and extend queries, could improve this search. MATERIAL AND METHOD: The ontological resource OntoEIM contains 58,000 classes and integrates MedDRA terminology. The entry point is a ADR-Drug term and the four methods are (i) a direct search on Pubmed (ii) a search with a normalized query enhanced with domain-specific Mesh Heading criteria, (iii) a search with the same elaborated query extended to the MeSH sub-hierarchy of the adverse effect entry and (iv) a search with a set of MedDRA terms grouped by subsomption in the OntoEIM ontology. For each of the 16 queries performed and analysed, relevant publications are selected "manually" by two pharmacovigilant experts. RESULTS: The recall is respectively of 63%, 50%, 67% and 74%, the precision of 13%, 26%, 29% and 4%. The best recall is provided by the ontology-based method, for 4 cases out of 16 this method returns relevant publications when the others return no results. CONCLUSION: Results show that an ontology-based search tool improves the recall performance, but other tools and methods are needed to raise the precision.


Assuntos
Mineração de Dados/métodos , Sistemas de Gerenciamento de Base de Dados , Documentação/métodos , Efeitos Colaterais e Reações Adversas Relacionados a Medicamentos/epidemiologia , Processamento de Linguagem Natural , PubMed , Terminologia como Assunto , Humanos , Vocabulário Controlado
5.
Stud Health Technol Inform ; 160(Pt 2): 1040-4, 2010.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-20841842

RESUMO

BACKGROUND: CCAM is a French terminology for coding clinical procedures. CCAM is a multi-hierarchical structured classification for procedures used in France for reimbursement in health care, which is external to UMLS. OBJECTIVE: The objective of this work is to describe a French lexical approach allowing mapping CCAM procedures to the UMLS Metathesaurus to achieve interoperability to multiple international terminologies. This approach used a preliminary step intended to take only the significant characters used to code CCAM corresponding to anatomical and actions axes. RESULTS: According to the 7,926 CCAM codes used in this study, 5,212 possible matches (exact matching, single to multiple matching, partial matching) are found using the French CCAM to UMLS based mapping, 65% of the corresponding anatomical terms in the CCAM code are mapped to at least one UMLS Concept and 37% of the corresponding action terms in the CCAM code are mapped to at least one UMLS Concept. For all the exact matches found (n=200), 91% were rated by a human expert as narrower than the mapped UMLS Concepts, while only 3% were irrelevant.


Assuntos
Codificação Clínica , Terminologia como Assunto , Unified Medical Language System , Indexação e Redação de Resumos , Atenção à Saúde/normas , França , Humanos , Unified Medical Language System/normas
6.
Front Pharmacol ; 10: 975, 2019.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-31551780

RESUMO

Background: Formal definitions allow selecting terms (e.g., identifying all terms related to "Infectious disease" using the query "has causative agent organism") and terminological reasoning (e.g., "hepatitis B" is a "hepatitis" and is an "infectious disease"). However, the standard international terminology Medical Dictionary for Regulatory Activities (MedDRA) used for coding adverse drug reactions in pharmacovigilance databases does not beneficiate from such formal definitions. Our objective was to evaluate the potential of reuse of ontological and non-ontological resources for generating such definitions for MedDRA. Methods: We developed several methods that collectively allow a semiautomatic semantic enrichment of MedDRA: 1) using MedDRA-to-SNOMED Clinical Terms (SNOMED CT) mappings (available in the Unified Medical Language System metathesaurus or other mapping resources, e.g., the MedDRA preferred term "hepatitis B" is associated to the SNOMED CT concept "type B viral hepatitis") to extract term definitions (e.g., "hepatitis B" is associated with the following properties: has finding site liver structure, has associated morphology inflammation morphology, and has causative agent hepatitis B virus); 2) using MedDRA labels and lexical/syntactic methods for automatic decomposition of complex MedDRA terms (e.g., the MedDRA systems organ class "blood and lymphatic system disorders" is decomposed in blood system disorders and lymphatic system disorders) or automatic suggestions of properties (e.g., the string "cyclic" in preferred term "cyclic neutropenia" leads to the property has clinical course cyclic). Results: The Unified Medical Language System metathesaurus was the main ontological resource reusable for generating formal definitions for MedDRA terms. The non-ontological resources (another mapping resource provided by Nadkarni and Darer in 2010 and MedDRA labels) allowed defining few additional preferred terms. While the Ci4SeR tool helped the curator to define 1,935 terms by suggesting potential supplemental relations based on the parents' and siblings' semantic definition, defining manually all MedDRA terms remains expensive in time. Discussion: Several ontological and non-ontological resources are available for associating MedDRA terms to SNOMED CT concepts with semantic properties, but providing manual definitions is still necessary. The ontology of adverse events is a possible alternative but does not cover all MedDRA terms either. Perspectives are to implement more efficient techniques to find more logical relations between SNOMED CT and MedDRA in an automated way.

7.
Comput Struct Biotechnol J ; 17: 869-885, 2019.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-31333814

RESUMO

Older age is associated with an increased accumulation of multiple chronic conditions. The clinical management of patients suffering from multiple chronic conditions is very complex, disconnected and time-consuming with the traditional care settings. Integrated care is a means to address the growing demand for improved patient experience and health outcomes of multimorbid and long-term care patients. Care planning is a prevalent approach of integrated care, where the aim is to deliver more personalized and targeted care creating shared care plans by clearly articulating the role of each provider and patient in the care process. In this paper, we present a method and corresponding implementation of a semi-automatic care plan management tool, integrated with clinical decision support services which can seamlessly access and assess the electronic health records (EHRs) of the patient in comparison with evidence based clinical guidelines to suggest personalized recommendations for goals and interventions to be added to the individualized care plans. We also report the results of usability studies carried out in four pilot sites by patients and clinicians.

8.
Learn Health Syst ; 1(1): e10014, 2017 Jan.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-31245551

RESUMO

With the development of platforms enabling the integration and use of phenome, genome, and exposome data in the context of international research, data management challenges are increasing, and scalable solutions for cross border and cross domain semantic interoperability need to be developed. Reusing routinely collected clinical data, especially, requires computable portable phenotype algorithms running across different electronic health record (EHR) products and healthcare systems. We propose a framework for describing and comparing mediation platforms enabling cross border phenotype identification within federated EHRs. This framework was used to describe the experience gained during the EHR4CR project and the evaluation of the platform developed for accessing semantically equivalent data elements across 11 European participating EHR systems from 5 countries. Developers of semantic interoperability platforms are beginning to address a core set of requirements in order to reach the goal of developing cross border semantic integration of data.

9.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-27570649

RESUMO

With the development of platforms enabling the use of routinely collected clinical data in the context of international clinical research, scalable solutions for cross border semantic interoperability need to be developed. Within the context of the IMI EHR4CR project, we first defined the requirements and evaluation criteria of the EHR4CR semantic interoperability platform and then developed the semantic resources and supportive services and tooling to assist hospital sites in standardizing their data for allowing the execution of the project use cases. The experience gained from the evaluation of the EHR4CR platform accessing to semantically equivalent data elements across 11 European participating EHR systems from 5 countries demonstrated how far the mediation model and mapping efforts met the expected requirements of the project. Developers of semantic interoperability platforms are beginning to address a core set of requirements in order to reach the goal of developing cross border semantic integration of data.

10.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-25954572

RESUMO

Integration profiles collaboratively developed by CDISC and IHE for integrating data from Electronic Health Records (EHRs) with clinical research and pharmacovigilance are limited to resolving lexical/syntactic data integration issues and do not address semantic barriers. This paper describes the collaboration between two European projects - EHR4CR and SALUS - in implementing ISO/IEC 11179-based metadata registries (MDRs) and semantically integrated cross-platform data access. A common "semantic MDR" provides a framework for bidirectional/cross-MDR mapping and federated queries are enabled using the newly-defined IHE Data Exchange (DEX) profile. In the pilot implementation, mappings for 178 EHR4CR and 199 SALUS metadata elements were persisted in the semantic MDR. The DEX profile was then used to access semantically equivalent data elements in SALUS or EHR4CR participating EHR systems. ISO/IEC 11179-based MDRs and DEX integration profile address the goal of developing pan-EU computable semantic integration of data from clinical care, clinical research, and patient safety platforms.

11.
AMIA Annu Symp Proc ; 2010: 61-5, 2010 Nov 13.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-21346941

RESUMO

In France, clinical procedures are coded with the French procedures classification (Classification Commune des Actes Médicaux, CCAM) and recorded in every hospital. CCAM uses hierarchical semi-structured codes which describe procedures (topography, action, access mode and/or technique). This amount of information could be analyzed and used for clinical and medico-economic evaluation. But relevant and practical data searches are difficult. In this paper we present a use case about searching for endoscopic activities in a case mix database to evaluate the relevance of the hierarchical organization and semi structured codes of CCAM in order to retrieve data already coded using this controlled vocabulary. Precision was 0.79 and recall 0.84 in the hierarchical search whereas precision was 0.94 and recall was 0.81 using part of the code related to access mode and/or technique. We discuss a revision of the CCAM by the use of an existing modeling (from the GALEN project) and better knowledge representation for each procedure.


Assuntos
Hospitais , Vocabulário Controlado , Grupos Diagnósticos Relacionados , França , Humanos , Armazenamento e Recuperação da Informação , Terminologia como Assunto
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