利用自然语言处理模型和真实世界数据优化临床试验资格设计:算法开发与验证。

JMIR AI Pub Date : 2024-07-29 DOI:10.2196/50800
Kyeryoung Lee, Zongzhi Liu, Yun Mai, Tomi Jun, Meng Ma, Tongyu Wang, Lei Ai, Ediz Calay, William Oh, Gustavo Stolovitzky, Eric Schadt, Xiaoyan Wang
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引用次数: 0

摘要

背景:临床试验对开发新的疗法至关重要,但也会延误药物开发。高效的试验数据管理、优化的试验方案和准确的患者识别对于缩短试验时间至关重要。自然语言处理(NLP)有可能实现这些目标:本研究旨在评估使用数据驱动方法优化临床试验方案设计和识别合格患者的可行性。这包括使用基于深度学习的 NLP 技术创建一个集成在电子健康记录中的综合资格标准知识库:我们从 ClinicalTrials.gov 获取了 3281 项行业赞助的 2 期或 3 期介入性临床试验的数据,这些试验招募了非小细胞肺癌、前列腺癌、乳腺癌、多发性骨髓瘤、溃疡性结肠炎和克罗恩病患者,时间跨度为 2013 年至 2020 年。我们使用定制的基于双向长短期记忆和条件随机场的 NLP 管道来提取所有资格标准属性,并将超音概念转换为可计算的假名及其相应值。为了说明模拟临床试验设计以达到优化目的,我们选择了西奈山医疗系统的非小细胞肺癌患者子集(n=2775)作为试点研究:我们对临床试验资格语料库(485/3281,14.78% 的试验)进行了人工标注,并构建了针对资格标准的本体。我们基于人工标注创建的资格标准专用本体开发了定制的 NLP 管道,取得了较高的精确度(0.91,范围 0.67-1.00)和召回率(0.79,范围 0.50-1),以及较高的 F1 分数(0.83,范围 0.67-1),从而能够从 3281 项临床试验中高效提取细粒度的标准实体和相关属性。通过将超词义概念转化为机器可解释的次词义及其相应值,开发出了与电子健康记录兼容的标准化资格标准知识库。此外,一个界面原型展示了利用真实世界数据优化临床试验方案和识别合格患者的实用性:结论:我们定制的 NLP 管道通过将超义词标准转化为机器可读的同义词及其相应值,成功生成了标准化的资格标准知识库。通过集成真实世界患者信息的原型界面,我们可以评估每个资格标准对符合试验资格的患者人数的影响。在数据驱动方法中利用 NLP 和真实世界数据,有望简化整个临床试验过程、优化流程并提高患者识别效率。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Optimizing Clinical Trial Eligibility Design Using Natural Language Processing Models and Real-World Data: Algorithm Development and Validation.

Background: Clinical trials are vital for developing new therapies but can also delay drug development. Efficient trial data management, optimized trial protocol, and accurate patient identification are critical for reducing trial timelines. Natural language processing (NLP) has the potential to achieve these objectives.

Objective: This study aims to assess the feasibility of using data-driven approaches to optimize clinical trial protocol design and identify eligible patients. This involves creating a comprehensive eligibility criteria knowledge base integrated within electronic health records using deep learning-based NLP techniques.

Methods: We obtained data of 3281 industry-sponsored phase 2 or 3 interventional clinical trials recruiting patients with non-small cell lung cancer, prostate cancer, breast cancer, multiple myeloma, ulcerative colitis, and Crohn disease from ClinicalTrials.gov, spanning the period between 2013 and 2020. A customized bidirectional long short-term memory- and conditional random field-based NLP pipeline was used to extract all eligibility criteria attributes and convert hypernym concepts into computable hyponyms along with their corresponding values. To illustrate the simulation of clinical trial design for optimization purposes, we selected a subset of patients with non-small cell lung cancer (n=2775), curated from the Mount Sinai Health System, as a pilot study.

Results: We manually annotated the clinical trial eligibility corpus (485/3281, 14.78% trials) and constructed an eligibility criteria-specific ontology. Our customized NLP pipeline, developed based on the eligibility criteria-specific ontology that we created through manual annotation, achieved high precision (0.91, range 0.67-1.00) and recall (0.79, range 0.50-1) scores, as well as a high F1-score (0.83, range 0.67-1), enabling the efficient extraction of granular criteria entities and relevant attributes from 3281 clinical trials. A standardized eligibility criteria knowledge base, compatible with electronic health records, was developed by transforming hypernym concepts into machine-interpretable hyponyms along with their corresponding values. In addition, an interface prototype demonstrated the practicality of leveraging real-world data for optimizing clinical trial protocols and identifying eligible patients.

Conclusions: Our customized NLP pipeline successfully generated a standardized eligibility criteria knowledge base by transforming hypernym criteria into machine-readable hyponyms along with their corresponding values. A prototype interface integrating real-world patient information allows us to assess the impact of each eligibility criterion on the number of patients eligible for the trial. Leveraging NLP and real-world data in a data-driven approach holds promise for streamlining the overall clinical trial process, optimizing processes, and improving efficiency in patient identification.

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