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1.
J Am Med Inform Assoc ; 30(3): 456-465, 2023 02 16.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36451277

ABSTRACT

OBJECTIVE: A previous study, PheMAP, combined independent, online resources to enable high-throughput phenotyping (HTP) using electronic health records (EHRs). However, online resources offer distinct quality descriptions of diseases which may affect phenotyping performance. We aimed to evaluate the phenotyping performance of single resource-based PheMAPs and investigate an optimized strategy for HTP. MATERIALS AND METHODS: We compared how each resource produced top-ranked concept unique identifiers (CUIs) by term frequency-inverse document frequency with Jaccard matrices comparing single resources and the original PheMAP. We correlated top-ranked concepts from each resource to features used in established Phenotype KnowledgeBase (PheKB) algorithms for hypothyroidism, type II diabetes mellitus (T2DM), and dementias. Using resources separately, we calculated multiple phenotype risk scores for individuals from Vanderbilt University Medical Center's BioVU DNA Biobank and compared phenotyping performance against rule-based eMERGE algorithms. Lastly, we implemented an ensemble strategy which classified patient case/control status based upon PheMAP resource agreement. RESULTS: Jaccard similarity matrices indicate that the similarity of CUIs comprising single resource-based PheMAPs varies. Single resource-based PheMAPs generated from MedlinePlus and MedicineNet outperformed others but only encompass 81.6% of overall disease phenotypes. We propose the PheMAP-Ensemble which provides higher average accuracy and precision than the combined average accuracy and precision of single resource-based PheMAPs. While offering complete phenotype coverage, PheMAP-Ensemble significantly increases phenotyping recall compared to the original iteration. CONCLUSIONS: Resources comprising the PheMAP produce different phenotyping performance when implemented individually. The ensemble method significantly improves the quality of PheMAP by fully utilizing dissimilar resources to capture accurate phenotyping data from EHRs.


Subject(s)
Diabetes Mellitus, Type 2 , Humans , Electronic Health Records , Algorithms , Knowledge Bases , Phenotype
2.
Int J Med Inform ; 156: 104621, 2021 12.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34673309

ABSTRACT

BACKGROUND: Although electronic health records (EHR) have significant potential for the study of opioid use disorders (OUD), detecting OUD in clinical data is challenging. Models using EHR data to predict OUD often rely on case/control classifications focused on extreme opioid use. There is a need to expand this work to characterize the spectrum of problematic opioid use. METHODS: Using a large academic medical center database, we developed 2 data-driven methods of OUD detection: (1) a Comorbidity Score developed from a Phenome-Wide Association Study of phenotypes associated with OUD and (2) a Text-based Score using natural language processing to identify OUD-related concepts in clinical notes. We evaluated the performance of both scores against a manual review with correlation coefficients, Wilcoxon rank sum tests, and area-under the receiver operating characteristic curves. Records with the highest Comorbidity and Text-based scores were re-evaluated by manual review to explore discrepancies. RESULTS: Both the Comorbidity and Text-based OUD risk scores were significantly elevated in the patients judged as High Evidence for OUD in the manual review compared to those with No Evidence (p = 1.3E-5 and 1.3E-6, respectively). The risk scores were positively correlated with each other (rho = 0.52, p < 0.001). AUCs for the Comorbidity and Text-based scores were high (0.79 and 0.76, respectively). Follow-up manual review of discrepant findings revealed strengths of data-driven methods over manual review, and opportunities for improvement in risk assessment. CONCLUSION: Risk scores comprising comorbidities and text offer differing but synergistic insights into characterizing problematic opioid use. This pilot project establishes a foundation for more robust work in the future.


Subject(s)
Chronic Pain , Opioid-Related Disorders , Analgesics, Opioid/therapeutic use , Chronic Pain/drug therapy , Chronic Pain/epidemiology , Humans , Natural Language Processing , Opioid-Related Disorders/epidemiology , Pilot Projects
3.
Oman Med J ; 35(6): e195, 2020 Nov.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33204521

ABSTRACT

OBJECTIVES: We sought to assess health literacy (HL) and its associated factors in the Bahraini community using a validated HL scale and address its deficient domains to inform policy. METHODS: We carried out a conveniently sampled, cross-sectional survey using the All Aspects of Health Literacy Scale in the Bahraini community. The scale has three key aspects: basic or functional HL (FUN-4 items), which corresponds to basic reading and writing skills, and knowledge of health conditions and health systems; communicative or interactive HL (COM-3 items) on communicative and social skills to extract information from different forms of communication; and critical HL (CR-4 items), the advanced cognitive and social skills to critically analyze information and exert greater control over life events and situations relating to individual and community level wellbeing goals. We examined the association between sociodemographic and health information for the survey tool items using the chi-square test. The relationship between total scale score and subscale scores of the three domains of the survey tool to sociodemographic and health information was investigated using the t-test and ANOVA. RESULTS: Of the 836 participants (mean age = 26.6 years), single (64.0%) and university students (76.6%) were predominant; 15.6% reported long-term sickness and visited the general physician often. The highest mean item scores were for empowerment (1.8) and lowest for functional HL (0.1). The significant domain-specific responses to the survey tool items were 12 for critical HL, 10 for functional HL, six for communicative HL, and five for empowerment. Participants aged < 30 years old, female, married, pursuing/completed Master's program, employed, and whose self-rating of health was excellent had higher total HL scores. CONCLUSIONS: Older, less educated respondents with a poor self-rating of health had low HL scores. We recommend further studies to address the relative importance of functional, interactive, and critical HL in the community to promote health outcomes.

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