Bridging Data Models in Health Care With a Novel Intermediate Query Format for Feasibility Queries: Mixed Methods Study.

IF 3.1 3区 医学 Q2 MEDICAL INFORMATICS
Lorenz Rosenau, Julian Gruendner, Alexander Kiel, Thomas Köhler, Bastian Schaffer, Raphael W Majeed
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

Background: To advance research with clinical data, it is essential to make access to the available data as fast and easy as possible for researchers, which is especially challenging for data from different source systems within and across institutions. Over the years, many research repositories and data standards have been created. One of these is the Fast Healthcare Interoperability Resources (FHIR) standard, used by the German Medical Informatics Initiative (MII) to harmonize and standardize data across university hospitals in Germany. One of the first steps to make these data available is to allow researchers to create feasibility queries to determine the data availability for a specific research question. Given the heterogeneity of different query languages to access different data across and even within standards such as FHIR (eg, CQL and FHIR Search), creating an intermediate query syntax for feasibility queries reduces the complexity of query translation and improves interoperability across different research repositories and query languages.

Objective: This study describes the creation and implementation of an intermediate query syntax for feasibility queries and how it integrates into the federated German health research portal (Forschungsdatenportal Gesundheit) and the MII.

Methods: We analyzed the requirements for feasibility queries and the feasibility tools that are currently available in research repositories. Based on this analysis, we developed an intermediate query syntax that can be easily translated into different research repository-specific query languages.

Results: The resulting Clinical Cohort Definition Language (CCDL) for feasibility queries combines inclusion criteria in a conjunctive normal form and exclusion criteria in a disjunctive normal form, allowing for additional filters like time or numerical restrictions. The inclusion and exclusion results are combined via an expression to specify feasibility queries. We defined a JSON schema for the CCDL, generated an ontology, and demonstrated the use and translatability of the CCDL across multiple studies and real-world use cases.

Conclusions: We developed and evaluated a structured query syntax for feasibility queries and demonstrated its use in a real-world example as part of a research platform across 39 German university hospitals.

利用用于可行性查询的新型中间查询格式连接医疗保健数据模型:混合方法研究。
背景:要推进临床数据研究,就必须让研究人员尽可能快速、方便地访问可用数据,这对于来自机构内部和机构间不同源系统的数据来说尤其具有挑战性。多年来,许多研究资料库和数据标准应运而生。其中之一就是快速医疗互操作性资源(FHIR)标准,该标准由德国医疗信息学倡议(MII)使用,用于统一和标准化德国各大学医院的数据。提供这些数据的第一步是允许研究人员创建可行性查询,以确定特定研究问题的数据可用性。鉴于不同的查询语言在 FHIR(如 CQL 和 FHIR Search)等标准之间甚至标准内部访问不同数据的异质性,为可行性查询创建中间查询语法可降低查询翻译的复杂性,提高不同研究资料库和查询语言之间的互操作性:本研究描述了可行性查询中间查询语法的创建和实施,以及如何将其集成到联合的德国健康研究门户网站(Forschungsdatenportal Gesundheit)和 MII 中:我们分析了可行性查询的要求以及目前研究资料库中可用的可行性工具。在分析的基础上,我们开发了一种中间查询语法,该语法可以很容易地翻译成不同研究资料库的特定查询语言:结果:由此产生的用于可行性查询的临床队列定义语言(CCDL)结合了连接正则表达式中的包含标准和非连接正则表达式中的排除标准,并允许使用时间或数字限制等附加筛选条件。包含和排除结果通过表达式结合起来,以指定可行性查询。我们为 CCDL 定义了一个 JSON 模式,生成了一个本体,并演示了 CCDL 在多项研究和真实世界用例中的使用和可转换性:我们开发并评估了用于可行性查询的结构化查询语法,并在一个实际案例中演示了其在德国 39 家大学医院研究平台中的应用。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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来源期刊
JMIR Medical Informatics
JMIR Medical Informatics Medicine-Health Informatics
CiteScore
7.90
自引率
3.10%
发文量
173
审稿时长
12 weeks
期刊介绍: JMIR Medical Informatics (JMI, ISSN 2291-9694) is a top-rated, tier A journal which focuses on clinical informatics, big data in health and health care, decision support for health professionals, electronic health records, ehealth infrastructures and implementation. It has a focus on applied, translational research, with a broad readership including clinicians, CIOs, engineers, industry and health informatics professionals. Published by JMIR Publications, publisher of the Journal of Medical Internet Research (JMIR), the leading eHealth/mHealth journal (Impact Factor 2016: 5.175), JMIR Med Inform has a slightly different scope (emphasizing more on applications for clinicians and health professionals rather than consumers/citizens, which is the focus of JMIR), publishes even faster, and also allows papers which are more technical or more formative than what would be published in the Journal of Medical Internet Research.
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