4.7 Article

Implementation of automated signal generation in pharmacovigilance using a knowledge-based approach

Journal

INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF MEDICAL INFORMATICS
Volume 74, Issue 7-8, Pages 563-571

Publisher

ELSEVIER IRELAND LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.ijmedinf.2005.04.006

Keywords

adverse drug reaction reporting systems; terminology; automatic data processing; knowledge representation (computer); description logic; ontological modeling

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Automated signal generation is a growing field in pharmacovigilance that relies on data mining of huge spontaneous reporting systems for detecting unknown adverse drug reactions (ADR). Previous implementations of quantitative techniques did not take into account issues related to the medical dictionary for regulatory activities (MedDRA) terminology used for coding ADRs. MedDRA is a first generation terminology tacking formal definitions; grouping of similar medical conditions is not accurate due to taxonomic limitations. Our objective was to build a data-mining tool. that improves signal detection algorithms by performing terminological reasoning on MedDRA codes described with the DAML + OIL description logic. We propose the PharmaMiner tool. that implements quantitative techniques based on underlying statistical and bayesian models. It is a JAVA application displaying results in tabular format and performing terminological reasoning with the Racer inference engine. The mean frequency of drug-adverse effect associations in the French database was 2.66. Subsumption reasoning based on MedDRA taxonomical hierarchy produced a mean number of occurrence of 2.92 versus 3.63 (p < 0.001) obtained with a combined technique using subsumption and approximate matching reasoning based on the ontological structure. Semantic integration of terminological systems with data mining methods is a promising technique for improving machine learning in medical databases. (C) 2005 Elsevier Ireland Ltd. All rights reserved.

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