The PACIFIC ontology for heterogeneous data management in cardiology.

Journal: Journal of biomedical informatics
PMID:

Abstract

With the emergence of health data warehouses and major initiatives to collect and analyze multi-modal and multisource data, data organization becomes central. In the PACIFIC-PRESERVED (PhenomApping, ClassIFication, and Innovation for Cardiac Dysfunction - Heart Failure with PRESERVED LVEF Study, NCT04189029) study, a data driven research project aiming at redefining and profiling the Heart Failure with preserved Ejection Fraction (HFpEF), an ontology was developed by different data experts in cardiology to enable better data management in a complex study context (multisource, multiformat, multimodality, multipartners). The PACIFIC ontology provides a cardiac data management framework for the phenomapping of patients. It was built upon the BMS-LM (Biomedical Study -Lifecycle Management) core ontology and framework, proposed in a previous work to ensure data organization and provenance throughout the study lifecycle (specification, acquisition, analysis, publication). The BMS-LM design pattern was applied to the PACIFIC multisource variables. In addition, data was structured using a subset of MeSH headings for diseases, technical procedures, or biological processes, and using the Uberon ontology anatomical entities. A total of 1372 variables were organized and enriched with annotations and description from existing ontologies and taxonomies such as LOINC to enable later semantic interoperability. Both, data structuring using the BMS-LM framework, and its mapping with published standards, foster interoperability of multimodal cardiac phenomapping datasets.

Authors

  • Amel Raboudi
    Fealinx, 37 rue Adam Ledoux 92400 Courbevoie, France; Université de Paris, PARCC, INSERM, F-75006 Paris, France; Université de Technologie de Compiègne, Roberval, Compiègne, France. Electronic address: amel.raboudi@utc.fr.
  • Pierre-Yves Hervé
    Université de Bordeaux, Institut des Maladies Neurodégéneratives, UMR 5293, Groupe d'Imagerie Neurofonctionnelle, F-33000 Bordeaux, France.
  • Marianne Allanic
    Althenas, Nantes, France. Electronic address: mallanic@althenas.com.
  • Philippe Boutinaud
    Ginesislab, Bordeaux, France.
  • Jean-Joseph Christophe
    Casis, Dijon, France. Electronic address: jjchristophe@casis.fr.
  • Hüseyin Firat
    Firalis, Huningue, France. Electronic address: hueseyin.firat@firalis.com.
  • Elie Mousseaux
    Department of Radiology, Hôpital Européen Georges Pompidou, APHP, University of Paris & INSERM, U970 29 rue Leblanc, 75015, Paris, France.
  • Mathieu Pernot
    Physics for Medicine Paris, INSERM U1273, ESPCI Paris, PSL University, CNRS FRE 2031, Paris, France. Electronic address: mathieu.pernot@espci.fr.
  • Pierre Prot
    BioSerenity, ICM iPeps, F-75013, Paris, France. Electronic address: pierre.prot@bioserenity.com.
  • Alfonso Sartorius-Carvajal
    Servier R&D, Suresnes, France. Electronic address: alfonso.sartorius-carvajal@servier.com.
  • Frédérique Chézalviel-Guilbert
    Sanofi R&D, Chilly Mazarin, France. Electronic address: frederique.guilbert@sanofi.com.
  • Jean-Sébastien Hulot
    Université de Paris, INSERM, PARCC, Paris, France; CIC1418 and DMU CARTE, AP-HP, Hôpital Européen Georges-Pompidou, Paris, France. Electronic address: jean-sebastien.hulot@aphp.fr.