Back to Search Start Over

Learning signals of adverse drug-drug interactions from the unstructured text of electronic health records.

Authors :
Iyer, Srinivasan V
Iyer, Srinivasan V
Lependu, Paea
Harpaz, Rave
Bauer-Mehren, Anna
Shah, Nigam H
Iyer, Srinivasan V
Iyer, Srinivasan V
Lependu, Paea
Harpaz, Rave
Bauer-Mehren, Anna
Shah, Nigam H
Publication Year :
2013

Abstract

Drug-drug interactions (DDI) account for 30% of all adverse drug reactions, which are the fourth leading cause of death in the US. Current methods for post marketing surveillance primarily use spontaneous reporting systems for learning DDI signals and validate their signals using the structured portions of Electronic Health Records (EHRs). We demonstrate a fast, annotation-based approach, which uses standard odds ratios for identifying signals of DDIs from the textual portion of EHRs directly and which, to our knowledge, is the first effort of its kind. We developed a gold standard of 1,120 DDIs spanning 14 adverse events and 1,164 drugs. Our evaluations on this gold standard using millions of clinical notes from the Stanford Hospital confirm that identifying DDI signals from clinical text is feasible (AUROC=81.5%). We conclude that the text in EHRs contain valuable information for learning DDI signals and has enormous utility in drug surveillance and clinical decision support.

Details

Database :
OAIster
Notes :
application/pdf
Publication Type :
Electronic Resource
Accession number :
edsoai.on1367414563
Document Type :
Electronic Resource