4.7 Article

Development and evaluation of MADDIE: Method to Acquire Delivery Date Information from Electronic health records

Journal

Publisher

ELSEVIER IRELAND LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.ijmedinf.2020.104339

Keywords

Electronic health records; Pregnancy; Algorithm; Population health

Funding

  1. Perelman School of Medicine at the University of Pennsylvania (USA)

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The study developed an algorithm named MADDIE to infer patient delivery dates and delivery-specific details from EHRs with high accuracy, and validated the results against a birth log, demonstrating its effectiveness in accurately identifying multiple deliveries per patient and augmenting the EHR with delivery-specific details.
Objective: To develop an algorithm that infers patient delivery dates (PDDs) and delivery-specific details from Electronic Health Records (EHRs) with high accuracy; enabling pregnancy-level outcome studies in women's health. Materials and Methods: We obtained EHR data from 1,060,100 female patients treated at Penn Medicine hospitals or outpatient clinics between 2010-2017. We developed an algorithm called MADDIE: Method to Acquire Delivery Date Information from Electronic Health Records that infers a PDD for distinct deliveries based on EHR encounter dates assigned a delivery code, the frequency of code usage, and the time differential between code assignments. We validated MADDIE's PDDs against a birth log independently maintained by the Department of Obstetrics and Gynecology. Results: MADDIE identified 50,560 patients having 63,334 distinct deliveries. MADDIE was 98.6 % accurate (F1 score 92.1 %) when compared to the birth log. The PDD was on average 0.68 days earlier than the true delivery date for patients with only one delivery ( 1.43 days) and 0.52 days earlier for patients with more than one delivery episode (+/- 1.11 days). Discussion: MADDIE is the first algorithm to successfully infer PDD information using only structured delivery codes and identify multiple deliveries per patient. MADDIE is also the first to validate the accuracy of the PDD using an external gold standard of known delivery dates as opposed to manual chart review of a sample. Conclusion: MADDIE augments the EHR with delivery-specific details extracted with high accuracy and relies only on structured EHR elements while harnessing temporal information and the frequency of code usage to identify accurate PDDs.

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