4.2 Article

MetaLAB-HOI: Template standardization of health outcomes enable massive and accurate detection of adverse drug reactions from electronic health records

Journal

PHARMACOEPIDEMIOLOGY AND DRUG SAFETY
Volume -, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1002/pds.5694

Keywords

adverse drug reaction; drug-induced liver injury; electronic health records; MetaLAB; OMOP-CDM

Ask authors/readers for more resources

This study aimed to improve the MetaLAB algorithm and validate its performance in detecting major adverse drug reactions, including drug-induced liver injury, with multicenter data. By considering demographic and clinical records, an optimized scenario for detecting adverse drug reactions was created based on MetaLAB. The MetaLAB-HOI algorithm was developed using common model-based multicenter electronic health record data to identify adverse drug reaction signals. The odds ratios of 101 drugs for health outcomes of interest were calculated in four medical centers.
Purpose: This study aimed to advance the MetaLAB algorithm and verify its performance with multicenter data to effectively detect major adverse drug reactions (ADRs), including drug-induced liver injury.Methods: Based on MetaLAB, we created an optimal scenario for detecting ADRs by considering demographic and clinical records. MetaLAB-HOI was developed to identify ADR signals using common model-based multicenter electronic health record (EHR) data from the clinical health outcomes of interest (HOI) template and design for drug-exposed and nonexposed groups. In this study, we calculated the odds ratio of 101 drugs for HOI in Konyang University Hospital, Seoul National University Hospital, Chungbuk National University Hospital, and Seoul National University Bundang Hospital.Results: The overlapping drugs in four medical centers are amlodipine, aspirin, bisoprolol, carvedilol, clopidogrel, clozapine, digoxin, diltiazem, methotrexate, and rosuvastatin. We developed MetaLAB-HOI, an algorithm that can detect ADRs more efficiently using EHR. We compared the detection results of four medical centers, with drug-induced liver injuries as representative ADRs.Conclusions: MetaLAB-HOI's strength lies in fully utilizing the patient's clinical information, such as prescription, procedure, and laboratory results, to detect ADR signals. Considering changes in the patient's condition over time, we created an algorithm based on a scenario that accounted for each drug exposure and onset period supervised by specialists for HOI. We determined that when a template capable of detecting ADR based on clinical evidence is developed and manualized, it can be applied in medical centers for new drugs with insufficient data.

Authors

I am an author on this paper
Click your name to claim this paper and add it to your profile.

Reviews

Primary Rating

4.2
Not enough ratings

Secondary Ratings

Novelty
-
Significance
-
Scientific rigor
-
Rate this paper

Recommended

No Data Available
No Data Available