Poster 108: Accuracy of Natural Language Processing for Identifying Spondyloarthropathy in Primary Care Patients Receiving Lumbar Spine Imaging

PM&R ◽  
2018 ◽  
Vol 10 ◽  
pp. S11-S11
Author(s):  
Mychael B. Lagbas ◽  
Jeffrey G. Jarvik ◽  
Sean D. Rundell ◽  
Kathryn T. James ◽  
RiniA. Desai ◽  
...  
JAMIA Open ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 4 (3) ◽  
Author(s):  
Craig H Ganoe ◽  
Weiyi Wu ◽  
Paul J Barr ◽  
William Haslett ◽  
Michelle D Dannenberg ◽  
...  

Abstract Objectives The objective of this study is to build and evaluate a natural language processing approach to identify medication mentions in primary care visit conversations between patients and physicians. Materials and Methods Eight clinicians contributed to a data set of 85 clinic visit transcripts, and 10 transcripts were randomly selected from this data set as a development set. Our approach utilizes Apache cTAKES and Unified Medical Language System controlled vocabulary to generate a list of medication candidates in the transcribed text and then performs multiple customized filters to exclude common false positives from this list while including some additional common mentions of the supplements and immunizations. Results Sixty-five transcripts with 1121 medication mentions were randomly selected as an evaluation set. Our proposed method achieved an F-score of 85.0% for identifying the medication mentions in the test set, significantly outperforming existing medication information extraction systems for medical records with F-scores ranging from 42.9% to 68.9% on the same test set. Discussion Our medication information extraction approach for primary care visit conversations showed promising results, extracting about 27% more medication mentions from our evaluation set while eliminating many false positives in comparison to existing baseline systems. We made our approach publicly available on the web as an open-source software. Conclusion Integration of our annotation system with clinical recording applications has the potential to improve patients’ understanding and recall of key information from their clinic visits, and, in turn, to positively impact health outcomes.


2019 ◽  
Vol 2 (8) ◽  
pp. e1910399
Author(s):  
Meliha Skaljic ◽  
Ihsaan H. Patel ◽  
Amelia M. Pellegrini ◽  
Victor M. Castro ◽  
Roy H. Perlis ◽  
...  

2013 ◽  
Vol 52 (01) ◽  
pp. 33-42 ◽  
Author(s):  
M.-H. Kuo ◽  
P. Gooch ◽  
J. St-Maurice

SummaryObjective: The objective of this study was to undertake a proof of concept that demonstrated the use of primary care data and natural language processing and term extraction to assess emergency room use. The study extracted biopsychosocial concepts from primary care free text and related them to inappropriate emergency room use through the use of odds ratios.Methods: De-identified free text notes were extracted from a primary care clinic in Guelph, Ontario and analyzed with a software toolkit that incorporated General Architecture for Text Engineering (GATE) and MetaMap components for natural language processing and term extraction.Results: Over 10 million concepts were extracted from 13,836 patient records. Codes found in at least 1% percent of the sample were regressed against inappropriate emergency room use. 77 codes fell within the realm of biopsychosocial, were very statistically significant (p < 0.001) and had an OR > 2.0. Thematically, these codes involved mental health and pain related concepts.Conclusions: Analyzed thematically, mental health issues and pain are important themes; we have concluded that pain and mental health problems are primary drivers for inappropriate emergency room use. Age and sex were not significant. This proof of concept demonstrates the feasibly of combining natural language processing and primary care data to analyze a system use question. As a first work it supports further research and could be applied to investigate other, more complex problems.


2021 ◽  
pp. 219256822110269
Author(s):  
Fabio Galbusera ◽  
Andrea Cina ◽  
Tito Bassani ◽  
Matteo Panico ◽  
Luca Maria Sconfienza

Study Design: Retrospective study. Objectives: Huge amounts of images and medical reports are being generated in radiology departments. While these datasets can potentially be employed to train artificial intelligence tools to detect findings on radiological images, the unstructured nature of the reports limits the accessibility of information. In this study, we tested if natural language processing (NLP) can be useful to generate training data for deep learning models analyzing planar radiographs of the lumbar spine. Methods: NLP classifiers based on the Bidirectional Encoder Representations from Transformers (BERT) model able to extract structured information from radiological reports were developed and used to generate annotations for a large set of radiographic images of the lumbar spine (N = 10 287). Deep learning (ResNet-18) models aimed at detecting radiological findings directly from the images were then trained and tested on a set of 204 human-annotated images. Results: The NLP models had accuracies between 0.88 and 0.98 and specificities between 0.84 and 0.99; 7 out of 12 radiological findings had sensitivity >0.90. The ResNet-18 models showed performances dependent on the specific radiological findings with sensitivities and specificities between 0.53 and 0.93. Conclusions: NLP generates valuable data to train deep learning models able to detect radiological findings in spine images. Despite the noisy nature of reports and NLP predictions, this approach effectively mitigates the difficulties associated with the manual annotation of large quantities of data and opens the way to the era of big data for artificial intelligence in musculoskeletal radiology.


Diabetes ◽  
2020 ◽  
Vol 69 (Supplement 1) ◽  
pp. 842-P
Author(s):  
EVA TSENG ◽  
JESSICA L. SCHWARTZ ◽  
MASOUD ROUHIZADEH ◽  
NISA M. MARUTHUR

2020 ◽  
Vol 20 (9) ◽  
pp. S11-S12
Author(s):  
Aditya V. Karhade ◽  
Michiel Bongers ◽  
Olivier Groot ◽  
Harold A. Fogel ◽  
Stuart H. Hershman ◽  
...  

2018 ◽  
Vol 25 (11) ◽  
pp. 1422-1432 ◽  
Author(s):  
W. Katherine Tan ◽  
Saeed Hassanpour ◽  
Patrick J. Heagerty ◽  
Sean D. Rundell ◽  
Pradeep Suri ◽  
...  

Sign in / Sign up

Export Citation Format

Share Document