Deriving an actionable patient phenome from healthcare data

Lead Research Organisation: University College London
Department Name: Institute of Health Informatics

Abstract

Translating routinely collected health data into knowledge is a requirement of a "learning health system". Since joining the Biomedical Research Centre at the South London and Maudsley Hospital, Kings College London, my research has been focused on developing 'CogStack and SemEHR'. This is an integrated health informatics platform which aims to to unlock unstructured health records and assist in clinical decision making and research. The system does much to surface the deep data within the NHS, for example through providing a patient-centric search on semantically annotated clinical notes to support studies such as the recruitment of patients for Genomics England's 100,000 Genomes project [1,2] and predicting adverse drug reactions [3].

However, there is considerable further potential for the generation of knowledge and action, for example through the application of machine learning to the data from this platform. For instance, the data returned through these systems needs to be integrated, verified and cleaned with biomedical knowledge, enriched with an accurate clinical context (to enhance the current sentence-level language context) and aligned with the patient timeline to derive a comprehensive patient phenome. Clinical knowledge needs to be formalised from clinical ontologies and integrated with relevant open data, which will drive automated inferences to lift lower-level features (e.g. numeric blood pressure readings) up to higher-level clinical variables (e.g. hypertension) for supporting decision making.

A pilot study of the comprehensive phenome model, SemEHR's medical profiles [2], evaluated on publicly accessible data from the Medical Information Mart for Intensive Care (MIMIC), has proven that better contextual information can lead to much better accuracy in making clinical conclusions - e.g. using patient medical history for subtyping atrial fibrillation where we demonstrated that such phenome data is within the top 10 key features in identifying clinically-sensible patient clusters. For 'action' generation in clinical settings, we have demonstrated the feasibility of alerts through a number of simple examples using CogStack. For example, at Kings College Hospital, we have detected abnormal pathology results for 25 patients being prescribed methotrexate for rheumatoid arthritis, preventing potentially fatal renal failure.

The proposed research will devise a semantic electronic health record toolkit that is able to derive a consistent and comprehensive patient phenome from unstructured and structured electronic health records and provide semantic computation upon it to support decision making for tailored care, trial recruitment and research.

References:
1. Wu H, et al. SemEHR: surfacing semantic data from clinical notes in electronic health records for tailored care, trial recruitment, and clinical research. Lancet. 2017;390: S97.
2. Wu H, et al. A General-purpose Semantic Search System to Surface Semantic Data from Clinical Notes for Tailored Care, Trial Recruitment and Clinical Research. Journal of the American Medical Informatics Association. 2017; doi: https://doi.org/10.1101/235622.
3. Bean DM, Wu H, et al. Knowledge graph prediction of unknown adverse drug reactions and validation in electronic health records. Sci Rep. 2017;7: 16416.

Technical Summary

For objective 1, at the data layer, my research will focus on a semantic phenome model that is able to detect/correct erroneous and inconsistent phenotypes, associate accurate contextual and temporal information with each phenotype mention and also support rule based reasoning to complete missing data. For objective 2, I will be devising and applying artificial intelligence models to derive unknown clinical knowledge from large scale, longitudinal and interlinked phenome data. potential use cases include predicting outcomes of septic shock treatments within intensive care units; predicting unknown adverse drug reactions in depression patients with comorbidities; subtyping atrial fibrillation to deliver tailored care. For objective 3, my research will provide actionable suggestions in clinical settings with applications of clinical trial recruitment and automated alerting for ensuring patient safety. Key challenges to be tackled here include how to make action suggestions explainable and reliable.

This project aims to deliver enabling technologies for The University of Edinburgh's HDR UK focus including deriving and applying health-related phenotypes at scale; computational tools for genetic and environmental risk prediction and causal inference. It will develop national leadership, partnerships, and interdisciplinary skills and capacity through the development of semantic computation infrastructure on top of deep and accurate patient phenome data, which if successful, can be disseminated to a wide range of healthcare service providers nationally/internationally and achieve high impact in research and patient care.

Publications

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Casey A (2021) A systematic review of natural language processing applied to radiology reports. in BMC medical informatics and decision making

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Dong H (2022) Automated clinical coding: what, why, and where we are? in NPJ digital medicine

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Whitfield E (2021) Axes of Prognosis: Identifying Subtypes of COVID-19 Outcomes. in AMIA ... Annual Symposium proceedings. AMIA Symposium

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Rannikmäe K (2021) Developing automated methods for disease subtyping in UK Biobank: an exemplar study on stroke. in BMC medical informatics and decision making

 
Description Invited talk at 1st International Symposium on Evidence-based Artificial Intelligence and Medicine (ISEAIM)
Geographic Reach Multiple continents/international 
Policy Influence Type Influenced training of practitioners or researchers
Impact My talk was titled "Derive insights from health data using knowledge graph technologies". I started with a brief introduction about what is a knowledge graph. Then, I used real-world examples to introduce how knowledge graph technologies could help clinical natural language processing. I finalised the talk with a bit of my own thinking in challenges and future directions of knowledge graphs for health care.
 
Description Artificial Intelligence and Multimorbidity: Clustering in Individuals, Space and Clinical Context (AIM-CISC)
Amount £3,919,510 (GBP)
Funding ID NIHR202639 
Organisation National Institute for Health Research 
Sector Public
Country United Kingdom
Start 08/2021 
End 08/2024
 
Description Improving the quality and value of care for people with poor prognosis cancers - a national, mixed methods study across Scotland
Amount £399,224 (GBP)
Organisation Health Foundation 
Sector Charity/Non Profit
Country United Kingdom
Start 04/2020 
End 08/2023
 
Description Iris.AI - The AI Chemist
Amount £39,000 (GBP)
Organisation Research Council of Norway 
Sector Public
Country Norway
Start 08/2021 
End 01/2022
 
Description The Advanced Care Research Centre Programme
Amount £20,000,000 (GBP)
Organisation Legal and General Group 
Sector Private
Country United Kingdom
Start 04/2020 
End 04/2026
 
Description Towards an AI-driven Health Informatics Platform for supporting clinical decision making in Scotland - a pilot study in NHS Lothian
Amount £29,200 (GBP)
Organisation Wellcome Trust 
Sector Charity/Non Profit
Country United Kingdom
Start 01/2020 
End 02/2021
 
Description UCL-NMU-SEU International Collaboration On Artificial Intelligence In Medicine: Tackling Challenges Of Low Generalisability And Health Inequality
Amount £29,400 (GBP)
Organisation British Council 
Sector Charity/Non Profit
Country United Kingdom
Start 02/2022 
End 02/2024
 
Description Using rare disease phenotype models to identify people at risk of COVID-19 adverse outcomes
Amount £38,065 (GBP)
Organisation National Institute for Health Research 
Sector Public
Country United Kingdom
Start 01/2023 
End 03/2023