4.7 Article

Cohort design and natural language processing to reduce bias in electronic health records research

Journal

NPJ DIGITAL MEDICINE
Volume 5, Issue 1, Pages -

Publisher

NATURE PORTFOLIO
DOI: 10.1038/s41746-022-00590-0

Keywords

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Funding

  1. NIH [T32HL007208, R38HL150212, K01HL148506, R01HL134893, R01HL140224, K24HL153669, 1R01HL139731, 1R01HL092577, R01HL128914, K24HL105780, R01NS103924, U01NS069673]
  2. American Heart Association (AHA) [18SFRN34250007]
  3. AHA [18SFRN34250007, 18SFRN34110082]
  4. Foundation Leducq [14CVD01]
  5. AHA-Bugher [21SFRN812095]
  6. Bayer AG

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This study used electronic health record datasets and employed sampling and natural language processing to recover missing data, resulting in a community-based research cohort. The results indicated that NLP can reduce missing vital signs, and the recovered vital signs were highly correlated with values derived from structured fields. Compared to convenience samples, C3PO showed lower incidence of atrial fibrillation and myocardial infarction/stroke, and the risk models were better calibrated.
Electronic health record (EHR) datasets are statistically powerful but are subject to ascertainment bias and missingness. Using the Mass General Brigham multi-institutional EHR, we approximated a community-based cohort by sampling patients receiving longitudinal primary care between 2001-2018 (Community Care Cohort Project [C3PO], n = 520,868). We utilized natural language processing (NLP) to recover vital signs from unstructured notes. We assessed the validity of C3PO by deploying established risk models for myocardial infarction/stroke and atrial fibrillation. We then compared C3PO to Convenience Samples including all individuals from the same EHR with complete data, but without a longitudinal primary care requirement. NLP reduced the missingness of vital signs by 31%. NLP-recovered vital signs were highly correlated with values derived from structured fields (Pearson r range 0.95-0.99). Atrial fibrillation and myocardial infarction/stroke incidence were lower and risk models were better calibrated in C3PO as opposed to the Convenience Samples (calibration error range for myocardial infarction/stroke: 0.012-0.030 in C3PO vs. 0.028-0.046 in Convenience Samples; calibration error for atrial fibrillation 0.028 in C3PO vs. 0.036 in Convenience Samples). Sampling patients receiving regular primary care and using NLP to recover missing data may reduce bias and maximize generalizability of EHR research.

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