4.6 Article

Combining knowledge- and data-driven methods for de-identification of clinical narratives

期刊

JOURNAL OF BIOMEDICAL INFORMATICS
卷 58, 期 -, 页码 S53-S59

出版社

ACADEMIC PRESS INC ELSEVIER SCIENCE
DOI: 10.1016/j.jbi.2015.06.029

关键词

De-identification; Named entity recognition; Information extraction; Clinical text mining; Electronic health record

资金

  1. Health e-Research Centre (HeRC)
  2. Christie Hospital NHS Foundation Trust
  3. KidsCan Charitable Trust
  4. Royal Manchester Children's Hospital
  5. Serbian Ministry of Education and Science [III44006, III47003]
  6. MRC [MR/K006665/1] Funding Source: UKRI

向作者/读者索取更多资源

A recent promise to access unstructured clinical data from electronic health records on large-scale has revitalized the interest in automated de-identification of clinical notes, which includes the identification of mentions of Protected Health Information (PHI). We describe the methods developed and evaluated as part of the i2b2/UTHealth 2014 challenge to identify PHI defined by 25 entity types in longitudinal clinical narratives. Our approach combines knowledge-driven (dictionaries and rules) and data-driven (machine learning) methods with a large range of features to address de-identification of specific named entities. In addition, we have devised a two-pass recognition approach that creates a patient-specific run-time dictionary from the PHI entities identified in the first step with high confidence, which is then used in the second pass to identify mentions that lack specific clues. The proposed method achieved the overall micro F-1-measures of 91% on strict and 95% on token-level evaluation on the test dataset (514 narratives). Whilst most PHI entities can be reliably identified, particularly challenging were mentions of Organizations and Professions. Still, the overall results suggest that automated text mining methods can be used to reliably process clinical notes to identify personal information and thus providing a crucial step in large-scale de-identification of unstructured data for further clinical and epidemiological studies. (C) 2015 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.

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