A weakly supervised model for the automated detection of adverse events using clinical notes.

Journal: Journal of biomedical informatics
Published Date:

Abstract

With clinical trials unable to detect all potential adverse reactions to drugs and medical devices prior to their release into the market, accurate post-market surveillance is critical to ensure their safety and efficacy. Electronic health records (EHR) contain rich observational patient data, making them a valuable source to actively monitor the safety of drugs and devices. While structured EHR data and spontaneous reporting systems often underreport the complexities of patient encounters and outcomes, free-text clinical notes offer greater detail about a patient's status. Previous studies have proposed machine learning methods to detect adverse events from clinical notes, but suffer from manually extracted features, reliance on costly hand-labeled data, and lack of validation on external datasets. To address these challenges, we develop a weakly-supervised machine learning framework for adverse event detection from unstructured clinical notes and evaluate it on insulin pump failure as a test case. Our model accurately detected cases of pump failure with 0.842 PR AUC on the holdout test set and 0.815 PR AUC when validated on an external dataset. Our approach allowed us to leverage a large dataset with far less hand-labeled data and can be easily transferred to additional adverse events for scalable post-market surveillance.

Authors

  • Josh Sanyal
    Stanford University, Department of Biomedical Data Science, Radiology, and Medicine, Stanford, CA, United States of America. Electronic address: jsanyal@stanford.edu.
  • Daniel Rubin
    Department of Radiology, Stanford University, Stanford, CA, USA.
  • Imon Banerjee
    Mayo Clinic, Department of Radiology, Scottsdale, AZ, USA.