基于回顾性差异分析,通过迭代完善快速医疗互操作性资源档案,发掘医疗数据的协调潜力:案例研究。

IF 3.1 3区 医学 Q2 MEDICAL INFORMATICS
Lorenz Rosenau, Paul Behrend, Joshua Wiedekopf, Julian Gruendner, Josef Ingenerf
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引用次数: 0

摘要

背景:医疗服务提供者之间的跨机构互操作性仍然是全球范围内经常面临的挑战。德国医疗信息学倡议是德国 37 家大学医院的合作项目,旨在通过定义用于跨机构交换医疗保健数据的快速医疗保健互操作性资源(FHIR)配置文件,即核心数据集(CDS),来实现合作医院之间的互操作性。当前的 CDS 及其扩展模块定义了代表患者医疗记录的元素。德国所有大学医院在以 CDS 为基础的标准化格式提供常规数据方面都取得了重大进展。此外,健康中央研究平台--德国医学研究数据门户网站可行性工具允许医学研究人员查询许多参与医院的可用 CDS 数据项:在这项研究中,我们旨在评估一种将当前自上而下生成的 FHIR 配置文件与通过分析各自实例数据获得的自下而上生成的知识相结合的新方法。这样,我们就能利用差异分析获得的信息,得出迭代完善 FHIR 配置文件的方案:我们开发了一个 FHIR 验证管道,并选择从原始 CDS 配置文件中提取限制性更强的配置文件。之所以做出这一决定,是因为需要更紧密地与中央可行性平台搜索本体的具体假设和要求保持一致。虽然原始 CDS 配置文件提供了一个通用框架,可适用于广泛的医学信息学用例,但它们缺乏具体性,无法模拟医学研究人员所必需的细微标准。这方面的一个重要例子就是必须准确地表示特定的实验室编码和值之间的相互依存关系。通过验证结果,我们可以发现临床站点的实例数据与可行性平台指定的配置文件之间的差异,并在今后加以解决:共有 20 家大学医院参与了这项研究。历史因素、缺乏统一、源系统范围广以及编码的病例敏感性是造成差异的部分原因。在我们的案例研究中,由于德国计费的立法要求,条件、程序和药物在实例数据编码方面具有高度的统一性,但我们发现,由于编码和价值之间的相互依存关系,实验室价值对数据协调构成了重大挑战:结论:虽然 CDS 实现了互操作性,但联合数据访问也面临着不同的挑战,需要更具体的配置文件才能对实例数据做出假设。我们还认为,进一步协调实例数据可以大大减少所需的追溯协调工作。我们认识到,差异不可能仅在临床现场得到解决;因此,我们的研究结果具有广泛的影响,需要各利益相关方在多个层面采取行动。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Uncovering Harmonization Potential in Health Care Data Through Iterative Refinement of Fast Healthcare Interoperability Resources Profiles Based on Retrospective Discrepancy Analysis: Case Study.

Background: Cross-institutional interoperability between health care providers remains a recurring challenge worldwide. The German Medical Informatics Initiative, a collaboration of 37 university hospitals in Germany, aims to enable interoperability between partner sites by defining Fast Healthcare Interoperability Resources (FHIR) profiles for the cross-institutional exchange of health care data, the Core Data Set (CDS). The current CDS and its extension modules define elements representing patients' health care records. All university hospitals in Germany have made significant progress in providing routine data in a standardized format based on the CDS. In addition, the central research platform for health, the German Portal for Medical Research Data feasibility tool, allows medical researchers to query the available CDS data items across many participating hospitals.

Objective: In this study, we aimed to evaluate a novel approach of combining the current top-down generated FHIR profiles with the bottom-up generated knowledge gained by the analysis of respective instance data. This allowed us to derive options for iteratively refining FHIR profiles using the information obtained from a discrepancy analysis.

Methods: We developed an FHIR validation pipeline and opted to derive more restrictive profiles from the original CDS profiles. This decision was driven by the need to align more closely with the specific assumptions and requirements of the central feasibility platform's search ontology. While the original CDS profiles offer a generic framework adaptable for a broad spectrum of medical informatics use cases, they lack the specificity to model the nuanced criteria essential for medical researchers. A key example of this is the necessity to represent specific laboratory codings and values interdependencies accurately. The validation results allow us to identify discrepancies between the instance data at the clinical sites and the profiles specified by the feasibility platform and addressed in the future.

Results: A total of 20 university hospitals participated in this study. Historical factors, lack of harmonization, a wide range of source systems, and case sensitivity of coding are some of the causes for the discrepancies identified. While in our case study, Conditions, Procedures, and Medications have a high degree of uniformity in the coding of instance data due to legislative requirements for billing in Germany, we found that laboratory values pose a significant data harmonization challenge due to their interdependency between coding and value.

Conclusions: While the CDS achieves interoperability, different challenges for federated data access arise, requiring more specificity in the profiles to make assumptions on the instance data. We further argue that further harmonization of the instance data can significantly lower required retrospective harmonization efforts. We recognize that discrepancies cannot be resolved solely at the clinical site; therefore, our findings have a wide range of implications and will require action on multiple levels and by various stakeholders.

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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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