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Automated extraction of Biomarker information from pathology reports

Cited 5 time in Web of Science Cited 8 time in Scopus
Authors

Lee, Jeongeun; Song, Hyun-Je; Yoon, Eunsil; Park, Seong-Bae; Park, Sung-Hye; Seo, Jeong-Wook; Park, Peom; Choi, Jinwook

Issue Date
2018-05-21
Publisher
BioMed Central
Citation
BMC Medical Informatics and Decision Making, 18(1):29
Keywords
BiomarkersCancer disease knowledge representation modelPathology reportsNatural language processingClinical decision-making
Abstract
Background
Pathology reports are written in free-text form, which precludes efficient data gathering. We aimed to overcome this limitation and design an automated system for extracting biomarker profiles from accumulated pathology reports.

Methods
We designed a new data model for representing biomarker knowledge. The automated system parses immunohistochemistry reports based on a slide paragraph unit defined as a set of immunohistochemistry findings obtained for the same tissue slide. Pathology reports are parsed using context-free grammar for immunohistochemistry, and using a tree-like structure for surgical pathology. The performance of the approach was validated on manually annotated pathology reports of 100 randomly selected patients managed at Seoul National University Hospital.

Results
High F-scores were obtained for parsing biomarker name and corresponding test results (0.999 and 0.998, respectively) from the immunohistochemistry reports, compared to relatively poor performance for parsing surgical pathology findings. However, applying the proposed approach to our single-center dataset revealed information on 221 unique biomarkers, which represents a richer result than biomarker profiles obtained based on the published literature. Owing to the data representation model, the proposed approach can associate biomarker profiles extracted from an immunohistochemistry report with corresponding pathology findings listed in one or more surgical pathology reports. Term variations are resolved by normalization to corresponding preferred terms determined by expanded dictionary look-up and text similarity-based search.

Conclusions
Our proposed approach for biomarker data extraction addresses key limitations regarding data representation and can handle reports prepared in the clinical setting, which often contain incomplete sentences, typographical errors, and inconsistent formatting.
ISSN
1472-6947
Language
English
URI
https://hdl.handle.net/10371/142747
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1186/s12911-018-0609-7
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