4.6 Article

dxpr: an R package for generating analysis-ready data from electronic health records-diagnoses and procedures

Journal

PEERJ COMPUTER SCIENCE
Volume -, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

PEERJ INC
DOI: 10.7717/peerj-cs.520

Keywords

Electronic health records; Analysis-ready data; Exploratory data analysis; R package

Funding

  1. Chang Gung Memorial Hospital [CMRPD3K0011]
  2. Ministry of Science and Technology, Taiwan [MOST 109-2636-E-008-009, MOST 110-2636-E-008-008]

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The dxpr package helps integrate and analyze clinical data, offering mechanisms to address common bottlenecks caused by characteristics such as heterogeneity and sparseness in clinical data. Conducting comorbidity data processes on a cohort of newborns, the package successfully identified significant differences in specific comorbidities between patients with and without certain diagnoses.
Background. Enriched electronic health records (EHRs) contain crucial information related to disease progression, and this information can help with decision-making in the health care field. Data analytics in health care is deemed as one of the essential processes that help accelerate the progress of clinical research. However, processing and analyzing EHR data are common bottlenecks in health care data analytics. Methods. The dxpr R package provides mechanisms for integration, wrangling, and visualization of clinical data, including diagnosis and procedure records. First, the dxpr package helps users transform International Classification of Diseases (ICD) codes to a uniform format. After code format transformation, the dxpr package supports four strategies for grouping clinical diagnostic data. For clinical procedure data, two grouping methods can be chosen. After EHRs are integrated, users can employ a set of flexible built-in querying functions for dividing data into case and control groups by using specified criteria and splitting the data into before and after an event based on the record date. Subsequently, the structure of integrated long data can be converted into wide, analysis-ready data that are suitable for statistical analysis and visualization. Results. We conducted comorbidity data processes based on a cohort of newborns from Medical Information Mart for Intensive Care-III (n = 7,833) by using the dxpr package. We first defined patent ductus arteriosus (PDA) cases as patients who had at least one PDA diagnosis (ICD, Ninth Revision, Clinical Modification [ICD-9-CM] 7470*). Controls were defined as patients who never had PDA diagnosis. In total, 381 and 7,452 patients with and without PDA, respectively, were included in our study population. Then, we grouped the diagnoses into defined comorbidities. Finally, we observed a statistically significant difference in 8 of the 16 comorbidities among patients with and without PDA, including fluid and electrolyte disorders, valvular disease, and others. Conclusions. This dxpr package helps clinical data analysts address the common bottleneck caused by clinical data characteristics such as heterogeneity and sparseness.

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