Sophie Quennelle , Sophie Malekzadeh-Milani , Nicolas Garcelon , Hassan Faour , Anita Burgun , Carole Faviez , Rosy Tsopra , Damien Bonnet , Antoine Neuraz
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引用次数: 0
Abstract
Objective
Automate the extraction of adverse events from the text of electronic medical records of patients hospitalized for cardiac catheterization.
Methods
We focused on events related to cardiac catheterization as defined by the NCDR-IMPACT registry. These events were extracted from the Necker Children’s Hospital data warehouse. Electronic health records were pre-screened using regular expressions. The resulting datasets contained numerous false positives sentences that were annotated by a cardiologist using an active learning process. A deep learning text classifier was then trained on this active learning-annotated dataset to accurately identify patients who have suffered a serious adverse event.
Results
The dataset included 2,980 patients. Regular expression based extraction of adverse events related to cardiac catheterization achieved a perfect recall. Due to the rarity of adverse events, the dataset obtained from this initial pre-screening step was imbalanced, containing a significant number of false positives. The active learning annotation enabled the acquisition of a representative dataset suitable for training a deep learning model. The deep learning text-classifier identified patients who underwent adverse events after cardiac catheterization with a recall of 0.78 and a specificity of 0.94.
Conclusion
Our model effectively identified patients who experienced adverse events related to cardiac catheterization using real clinical data. Enabled by an active learning annotation process, it shows promise for large language model applications in clinical research, especially for rare diseases with limited annotated databases. Our model’s strength lies in its development by physicians for physicians, ensuring its relevance and applicability in clinical practice.
期刊介绍:
International Journal of Medical Informatics provides an international medium for dissemination of original results and interpretative reviews concerning the field of medical informatics. The Journal emphasizes the evaluation of systems in healthcare settings.
The scope of journal covers:
Information systems, including national or international registration systems, hospital information systems, departmental and/or physician''s office systems, document handling systems, electronic medical record systems, standardization, systems integration etc.;
Computer-aided medical decision support systems using heuristic, algorithmic and/or statistical methods as exemplified in decision theory, protocol development, artificial intelligence, etc.
Educational computer based programs pertaining to medical informatics or medicine in general;
Organizational, economic, social, clinical impact, ethical and cost-benefit aspects of IT applications in health care.