Finding 'Evidence of Absence' in Medical Notes: Using NLP for Clinical Inferencing.

Journal: Studies in health technology and informatics
PMID:

Abstract

Extracting evidence of the absence of a target of interest from medical text can be useful in clinical inferencing. The purpose of our study was to develop a natural language processing (NLP) pipelineto identify the presence of indwelling urinary catheters from electronic medical notes to aid in detection of catheter-associated urinary tract infections (CAUTI). Finding clear evidence that a patient does not have an indwelling urinary catheter is useful in making a determination regarding CAUTI. We developed a lexicon of seven core concepts to infer the absence of a urinary catheter. Of the 990,391 concepts extractedby NLP from a large corpus of 744,285 electronic medical notes from 5589 hospitalized patients, 63,516 were labeled as evidence of absence.Human review revealed three primary causes for false negatives. The lexicon and NLP pipeline were refined using this information, resulting in outputs with an acceptable false positive rate of 11%.

Authors

  • Marjorie E Carter
    IDEAS Center, VA Salt Lake City Health Care System, Salt Lake City, Utah, USA; Departments of Internal Medicine and Biomedical Informatics, University of Utah School of Medicine, Salt Lake City, Utah, USA.
  • Guy Divita
    VA Salt Lake City Health Care System, Salt Lake City, Utah, USA.
  • Andrew Redd
    Andrew Redd, PhD, is an Assistant Professor at the University of Utah and a statistician in the IDEAS Center at the VA Salt Lake City Health Care System in Salt Lake City, UT.
  • Michael A Rubin
    VA Salt Lake City Health Care System & University of Utah, Salt Lake City, UT, USA.
  • Matthew H Samore
    VA Salt Lake City Health Care System, Salt Lake City, Utah, USA.
  • Kalpana Gupta
    3Department of Medicine,VA Boston Healthcare System,Boston,Massachusetts.
  • Barbara W Trautner
    Center for Innovations in Quality Effectiveness, and Safety, Michael E. DeBakey Veterans Affairs Medical Center and Baylor College of Medicine, Houston, TX, USA.
  • Adi V Gundlapalli
    School of Medicine, University of Utah, Salt Lake City, Utah, US.