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Knowledge discovery for Deep Phenotyping serious mental illness from Electronic Mental Health records

Stewart, R. (författare)
United Kingdom
Jackson, R. (författare)
United Kingdom
Patel, R. (författare)
united Kingdom
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Velupillai, Sumithra (författare)
KTH,Teoretisk datalogi, TCS
Gkotsis, G. (författare)
United Kingdom
Hoyle, D. (författare)
United Kingdom
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 (creator_code:org_t)
2018-05-08
2018
Engelska.
Ingår i: F1000 Research. - : F1000 Research Ltd. - 2046-1402. ; 7
  • Tidskriftsartikel (refereegranskat)
Abstract Ämnesord
Stäng  
  • Background: Deep Phenotyping is the precise and comprehensive analysis of phenotypic features in which the individual components of the phenotype are observed and described. In UK mental health clinical practice, most clinically relevant information is recorded as free text in the Electronic Health Record, and offers a granularity of information beyond what is expressed in most medical knowledge bases. The SNOMED CT nomenclature potentially offers the means to model such information at scale, yet given a sufficiently large body of clinical text collected over many years, it is difficult to identify the language that clinicians favour to express concepts. Methods: By utilising a large corpus of healthcare data, we sought to make use of semantic modelling and clustering techniques to represent the relationship between the clinical vocabulary of internationally recognised SMI symptoms and the preferred language used by clinicians within a care setting. We explore how such models can be used for discovering novel vocabulary relevant to the task of phenotyping Serious Mental Illness (SMI) with only a small amount of prior knowledge. Results: 20 403 terms were derived and curated via a two stage methodology. The list was reduced to 557 putative concepts based on eliminating redundant information content. These were then organised into 9 distinct categories pertaining to different aspects of psychiatric assessment. 235 concepts were found to be expressions of putative clinical significance. Of these, 53 were identified having novel synonymy with existing SNOMED CT concepts. 106 had no mapping to SNOMED CT. Conclusions: We demonstrate a scalable approach to discovering new concepts of SMI symptomatology based on real-world clinical observation. Such approaches may offer the opportunity to consider broader manifestations of SMI symptomatology than is typically assessed via current diagnostic frameworks, and create the potential for enhancing nomenclatures such as SNOMED CT based on real-world expressions.

Ämnesord

NATURVETENSKAP  -- Data- och informationsvetenskap -- Annan data- och informationsvetenskap (hsv//swe)
NATURAL SCIENCES  -- Computer and Information Sciences -- Other Computer and Information Science (hsv//eng)

Nyckelord

Electronic health records
Natural language processing
Schizophrenia
Serious mental illness
Word2vec
Article
clinical feature
electronic health record
knowledge base
knowledge discovery
medical information
medical terminology
mental disease
mental health
phenotype
psychologic assessment
symptomatology

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