Transforming epilepsy research: A systematic review on natural language processing applications.

Journal: Epilepsia
Published Date:

Abstract

Despite improved ancillary investigations in epilepsy care, patients' narratives remain indispensable for diagnosing and treatment monitoring. This wealth of information is typically stored in electronic health records and accumulated in medical journals in an unstructured manner, thereby restricting complete utilization in clinical decision-making. To this end, clinical researchers increasing apply natural language processing (NLP)-a branch of artificial intelligence-as it removes ambiguity, derives context, and imbues standardized meaning from free-narrative clinical texts. This systematic review presents an overview of the current NLP applications in epilepsy and discusses the opportunities and drawbacks of NLP alongside its future implications. We searched the PubMed and Embase databases with a "natural language processing" and "epilepsy" query (March 4, 2022) and included original research articles describing the application of NLP techniques for textual analysis in epilepsy. Twenty-six studies were included. Fifty-eight percent of these studies used NLP to classify clinical records into predefined categories, improving patient identification and treatment decisions. Other applications of NLP had structured clinical information retrieval from electronic health records, scientific papers, and online posts of patients. Challenges and opportunities of NLP applications for enhancing epilepsy care and research are discussed. The field could further benefit from NLP by replicating successes in other health care domains, such as NLP-aided quality evaluation for clinical decision-making, outcome prediction, and clinical record summarization.

Authors

  • Arister N J Yew
    University College Utrecht, Utrecht University, Utrecht, The Netherlands.
  • Marijn Schraagen
    Department of Information and Computing Sciences, Faculty of Science, Utrecht University, Utrecht, The Netherlands.
  • Willem M Otte
    DeepDoc Academy, Rotterdam, the Netherlands; Department of Child Neurology, UMC Utrecht Brain Center, University Medical Center (UMC) Utrecht, Utrecht, the Netherlands.
  • Eric van Diessen
    Department of Child Neurology, Brain Center, University Medical Center Utrecht and Utrecht University, Utrecht, The Netherlands.