scholarly journals The Use of European Electronic Health Records to Investigate Cancer Treatment Pathways

2013 ◽  
Vol 16 (7) ◽  
pp. A615
Author(s):  
J. Langham ◽  
S. Langham ◽  
S. Weir ◽  
S. Ralston
PLoS ONE ◽  
2020 ◽  
Vol 15 (12) ◽  
pp. e0244004
Author(s):  
Onintze Zaballa ◽  
Aritz Pérez ◽  
Elisa Gómez Inhiesto ◽  
Teresa Acaiturri Ayesta ◽  
Jose A. Lozano

The aim of this paper is to analyze the sequence of actions in the health system associated with a particular disease. In order to do that, using Electronic Health Records, we define a general methodology that allows us to: (i) identify the actions in the health system associated with a disease; (ii) identify those patients with a complete treatment for the disease; (iii) and discover common treatment pathways followed by the patients with a specific diagnosis. The methodology takes into account the characteristics of the EHRs, such as record heterogeneity and missing information. As an example, we use the proposed methodology to analyze breast cancer disease. For this diagnosis, 5 groups of treatments, which fit in with medical practice guidelines and expert knowledge, were obtained.


2016 ◽  
Vol 113 (27) ◽  
pp. 7329-7336 ◽  
Author(s):  
George Hripcsak ◽  
Patrick B. Ryan ◽  
Jon D. Duke ◽  
Nigam H. Shah ◽  
Rae Woong Park ◽  
...  

Observational research promises to complement experimental research by providing large, diverse populations that would be infeasible for an experiment. Observational research can test its own clinical hypotheses, and observational studies also can contribute to the design of experiments and inform the generalizability of experimental research. Understanding the diversity of populations and the variance in care is one component. In this study, the Observational Health Data Sciences and Informatics (OHDSI) collaboration created an international data network with 11 data sources from four countries, including electronic health records and administrative claims data on 250 million patients. All data were mapped to common data standards, patient privacy was maintained by using a distributed model, and results were aggregated centrally. Treatment pathways were elucidated for type 2 diabetes mellitus, hypertension, and depression. The pathways revealed that the world is moving toward more consistent therapy over time across diseases and across locations, but significant heterogeneity remains among sources, pointing to challenges in generalizing clinical trial results. Diabetes favored a single first-line medication, metformin, to a much greater extent than hypertension or depression. About 10% of diabetes and depression patients and almost 25% of hypertension patients followed a treatment pathway that was unique within the cohort. Aside from factors such as sample size and underlying population (academic medical center versus general population), electronic health records data and administrative claims data revealed similar results. Large-scale international observational research is feasible.


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