Mining of EHR for interface terminology concepts for annotating EHRs of COVID patients
Document Type
Article
Publication Date
12-1-2023
Abstract
Background: Two years into the COVID-19 pandemic and with more than five million deaths worldwide, the healthcare establishment continues to struggle with every new wave of the pandemic resulting from a new coronavirus variant. Research has demonstrated that there are variations in the symptoms, and even in the order of symptom presentations, in COVID-19 patients infected by different SARS-CoV-2 variants (e.g., Alpha and Omicron). Textual data in the form of admission notes and physician notes in the Electronic Health Records (EHRs) is rich in information regarding the symptoms and their orders of presentation. Unstructured EHR data is often underutilized in research due to the lack of annotations that enable automatic extraction of useful information from the available extensive volumes of textual data. Methods: We present the design of a COVID Interface Terminology (CIT), not just a generic COVID-19 terminology, but one serving a specific purpose of enabling automatic annotation of EHRs of COVID-19 patients. CIT was constructed by integrating existing COVID-related ontologies and mining additional fine granularity concepts from clinical notes. The iterative mining approach utilized the techniques of 'anchoring' and 'concatenation' to identify potential fine granularity concepts to be added to the CIT. We also tested the generalizability of our approach on a hold-out dataset and compared the annotation coverage to the coverage obtained for the dataset used to build the CIT. Results: Our experiments demonstrate that this approach results in higher annotation coverage compared to existing ontologies such as SNOMED CT and Coronavirus Infectious Disease Ontology (CIDO). The final version of CIT achieved about 20% more coverage than SNOMED CT and 50% more coverage than CIDO. In the future, the concepts mined and added into CIT could be used as training data for machine learning models for mining even more concepts into CIT and further increasing the annotation coverage. Conclusion: In this paper, we demonstrated the construction of a COVID interface terminology that can be utilized for automatically annotating EHRs of COVID-19 patients. The techniques presented can identify frequently documented fine granularity concepts that are missing in other ontologies thereby increasing the annotation coverage.
Identifier
85148963705 (Scopus)
Publication Title
BMC Medical Informatics and Decision Making
External Full Text Location
https://doi.org/10.1186/s12911-023-02136-0
e-ISSN
14726947
PubMed ID
36829139
Volume
23
Grant
UL1TR003017
Fund Ref
National Institutes of Health
Recommended Citation
Keloth, Vipina K.; Zhou, Shuxin; Lindemann, Luke; Zheng, Ling; Elhanan, Gai; Einstein, Andrew J.; Geller, James; and Perl, Yehoshua, "Mining of EHR for interface terminology concepts for annotating EHRs of COVID patients" (2023). Faculty Publications. 1298.
https://digitalcommons.njit.edu/fac_pubs/1298