A bottom-up approach to creating an ontology for medication indications
Author(s) -
Stuart J. Nelson,
Allen Flynn,
Mark S. Tuttle
Publication year - 2020
Publication title -
journal of the american medical informatics association
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.614
H-Index - 150
eISSN - 1527-974X
pISSN - 1067-5027
DOI - 10.1093/jamia/ocaa331
Subject(s) - workflow , computer science , context (archaeology) , narrative , ontology , assertion , information retrieval , artificial intelligence , data science , natural language processing , programming language , linguistics , database , epistemology , history , philosophy , archaeology
OBJECTIVESThe study sought to learn if it were possible to develop an ontology that would allow the Food and Drug Administration approved indications to be expressed in a manner computable and comparable to what is expressed in an electronic health record.MATERIALS AND METHODSA random sample of 1177 of the 3000+ extant, distinct medical products (identified by unique new drug application numbers) was selected for investigation. Close manual examination of the indication portion of the labels for these drugs led to the development of a formal model of indications.RESULTSThe model represents each narrative indication as a disjunct of conjuncts of assertions about an individual. A desirable attribute is that each assertion about an individual should be testable without reference to other contextual information about the situation. The logical primitives are chosen from 2 categories (context and conditions) and are linked to an enumeration of uses, such as prevention. We found that more than 99% of approved label indications for treatment or prevention could be so represented.DISCUSSIONWhile some indications are straightforward to represent, difficulties stem from the need to represent temporal or sequential references. In addition, there is a mismatch of terminologies between what is present in an electronic health record and in the label narrative.CONCLUSIONSA workable model for formalizing drug indications is possible. Remaining challenges include designing workflow to model narrative label indications for all approved drug products and incorporation of standard vocabularies.
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