Using Large Language Models to Abstract Complex Social Determinants of Health From Original and Deidentified Medical Notes: Development and Validation Study.

IF 5.8 2区 医学 Q1 HEALTH CARE SCIENCES & SERVICES Journal of Medical Internet Research Pub Date : 2024-11-19 DOI:10.2196/63445
Alexandra Ralevski, Nadaa Taiyab, Michael Nossal, Lindsay Mico, Samantha Piekos, Jennifer Hadlock
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Abstract

Background: Social determinants of health (SDoH) such as housing insecurity are known to be intricately linked to patients' health status. More efficient methods for abstracting structured data on SDoH can help accelerate the inclusion of exposome variables in biomedical research and support health care systems in identifying patients who could benefit from proactive outreach. Large language models (LLMs) developed from Generative Pre-trained Transformers (GPTs) have shown potential for performing complex abstraction tasks on unstructured clinical notes.

Objective: Here, we assess the performance of GPTs on identifying temporal aspects of housing insecurity and compare results between both original and deidentified notes.

Methods: We compared the ability of GPT-3.5 and GPT-4 to identify instances of both current and past housing instability, as well as general housing status, from 25,217 notes from 795 pregnant women. Results were compared with manual abstraction, a named entity recognition model, and regular expressions.

Results: Compared with GPT-3.5 and the named entity recognition model, GPT-4 had the highest performance and had a much higher recall (0.924) than human abstractors (0.702) in identifying patients experiencing current or past housing instability, although precision was lower (0.850) compared with human abstractors (0.971). GPT-4's precision improved slightly (0.936 original, 0.939 deidentified) on deidentified versions of the same notes, while recall dropped (0.781 original, 0.704 deidentified).

Conclusions: This work demonstrates that while manual abstraction is likely to yield slightly more accurate results overall, LLMs can provide a scalable, cost-effective solution with the advantage of greater recall. This could support semiautomated abstraction, but given the potential risk for harm, human review would be essential before using results for any patient engagement or care decisions. Furthermore, recall was lower when notes were deidentified prior to LLM abstraction.

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使用大型语言模型从原始和去身份化医疗记录中抽象出复杂的健康社会决定因素:开发和验证研究。
背景:众所周知,住房不安全等健康的社会决定因素(SDoH)与患者的健康状况密切相关。采用更有效的方法来抽取有关 SDoH 的结构化数据,有助于加快将暴露组变量纳入生物医学研究的速度,并支持医疗保健系统识别可从主动外展服务中受益的患者。由生成预训练转换器(GPT)开发的大型语言模型(LLM)已显示出在非结构化临床笔记上执行复杂抽象任务的潜力。目的:在此,我们评估了 GPT 在识别住房不安全的时间方面的性能,并比较了原始笔记和去标识笔记的结果:我们比较了 GPT-3.5 和 GPT-4 从 795 名孕妇的 25,217 份笔记中识别当前和过去住房不稳定情况以及一般住房状况的能力。结果与人工抽象、命名实体识别模型和正则表达式进行了比较:与 GPT-3.5 和命名实体识别模型相比,GPT-4 的性能最高,在识别当前或过去住房不稳定的患者方面,召回率(0.924)远高于人工摘录者(0.702),但精确度(0.850)低于人工摘录者(0.971)。在相同笔记的去标识化版本中,GPT-4 的精确度略有提高(原始版本为 0.936,去标识化版本为 0.939),而召回率则有所下降(原始版本为 0.781,去标识化版本为 0.704):这项工作表明,虽然人工抽取的结果总体上可能略微准确一些,但 LLM 可以提供一种可扩展的、具有成本效益的解决方案,其优势在于召回率更高。这可以支持半自动抽取,但考虑到潜在的伤害风险,在将结果用于任何患者参与或护理决策之前,人工审核是必不可少的。此外,在抽取 LLM 之前对笔记进行去标识化处理时,召回率较低。
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来源期刊
CiteScore
14.40
自引率
5.40%
发文量
654
审稿时长
1 months
期刊介绍: The Journal of Medical Internet Research (JMIR) is a highly respected publication in the field of health informatics and health services. With a founding date in 1999, JMIR has been a pioneer in the field for over two decades. As a leader in the industry, the journal focuses on digital health, data science, health informatics, and emerging technologies for health, medicine, and biomedical research. It is recognized as a top publication in these disciplines, ranking in the first quartile (Q1) by Impact Factor. Notably, JMIR holds the prestigious position of being ranked #1 on Google Scholar within the "Medical Informatics" discipline.
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