Natural Language Processing Model for Identifying Critical Findings-A Multi-Institutional Study.

Journal: Journal of digital imaging
Published Date:

Abstract

Improving detection and follow-up of recommendations made in radiology reports is a critical unmet need. The long and unstructured nature of radiology reports limits the ability of clinicians to assimilate the full report and identify all the pertinent information for prioritizing the critical cases. We developed an automated NLP pipeline using a transformer-based ClinicalBERT model which was fine-tuned on 3 M radiology reports and compared against the traditional BERT model. We validated the models on both internal hold-out ED cases from EUH as well as external cases from Mayo Clinic. We also evaluated the model by combining different sections of the radiology reports. On the internal test set of 3819 reports, the ClinicalBERT model achieved 0.96 f1-score while the BERT also achieved the same performance using the reason for exam and impression sections. However, ClinicalBERT outperformed BERT on the external test dataset of 2039 reports and achieved the highest performance for classifying critical finding reports (0.81 precision and 0.54 recall). The ClinicalBERT model has been successfully applied to large-scale radiology reports from 5 different sites. Automated NLP system that can analyze free-text radiology reports, along with the reason for the exam, to identify critical radiology findings and recommendations could enable automated alert notifications to clinicians about the need for clinical follow-up. The clinical significance of our proposed model is that it could be used as an additional layer of safeguard to clinical practice and reduce the chance of important findings reported in a radiology report is not overlooked by clinicians as well as provide a way to retrospectively track large hospital databases for evaluating the documentation of the critical findings.

Authors

  • Imon Banerjee
    Mayo Clinic, Department of Radiology, Scottsdale, AZ, USA.
  • Melissa A Davis
    Department of Radiology and Biomedical Imaging, Yale University School of Medicine, 330 Cedar St. Tompkins East TE-2, New Haven, CT 06520.
  • Brianna L Vey
    Department of Radiology and Imaging Sciences, Emory University School of Medicine, Atlanta, Georgia. Electronic address: bvey@emory.edu.
  • Sina Mazaheri
    School of Medicine, Emory University, 1364 Clifton Road NE, 30322, Atlanta, USA.
  • Fiza Khan
    School of Medicine, Emory University, 1364 Clifton Road NE, 30322, Atlanta, USA.
  • Vaz Zavaletta
    School of Medicine, Emory University, 1364 Clifton Road NE, 30322, Atlanta, USA.
  • Roger Gerard
    School of Medicine, Emory University, 1364 Clifton Road NE, 30322, Atlanta, USA.
  • Judy Wawira Gichoya
    Department of Interventional Radiology, Oregon Health & Science University, Portland, Oregon; Department of Radiology and Imaging Sciences, Emory University, Atlanta, Georgia.
  • Bhavik Patel
    Department of Radiology, Mayo Clinic, 5777 E Mayo Blvd, Phoenix, AZ, 85054, USA.