Methods Inf Med 2023; 62(05/06): 193-201
DOI: 10.1055/a-2233-2736
Original Article

Use of Natural Language Processing to Identify Sexual and Reproductive Health Information in Clinical Text

Elizabeth I. Harrison
1   Department of Pediatrics, UPMC Children's Hospital of Pittsburgh, Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, United States
,
Laura A. Kirkpatrick
1   Department of Pediatrics, UPMC Children's Hospital of Pittsburgh, Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, United States
,
Patrick W. Harrison
2   Data Theoretic, Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, United States
,
Traci M. Kazmerski
1   Department of Pediatrics, UPMC Children's Hospital of Pittsburgh, Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, United States
,
Yoshimi Sogawa
1   Department of Pediatrics, UPMC Children's Hospital of Pittsburgh, Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, United States
,
Harry S. Hochheiser
3   Department of Biomedical Informatics, University of Pittsburgh School of Medicine, Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, United States
› Author Affiliations
Funding Funding for this study came from the American Academy of Neurology Resident Research Scholarship (Grant #1212269). University of Pittsburgh Medical Center (UPMC) clinical data used for this research were provided by Health Record Research Request (R3).

Abstract

Objectives This study aimed to enable clinical researchers without expertise in natural language processing (NLP) to extract and analyze information about sexual and reproductive health (SRH), or other sensitive health topics, from large sets of clinical notes.

Methods (1) We retrieved text from the electronic health record as individual notes. (2) We segmented notes into sentences using one of scispaCy's NLP toolkits. (3) We exported sentences to the labeling application Watchful and annotated subsets of these as relevant or irrelevant to various SRH categories by applying a combination of regular expressions and manual annotation. (4) The labeled sentences served as training data to create machine learning models for classifying text; specifically, we used spaCy's default text classification ensemble, comprising a bag-of-words model and a neural network with attention. (5) We applied each model to unlabeled sentences to identify additional references to SRH with novel relevant vocabulary. We used this information and repeated steps 3 to 5 iteratively until the models identified no new relevant sentences for each topic. Finally, we aggregated the labeled data for analysis.

Results This methodology was applied to 3,663 Child Neurology notes for 971 female patients. Our search focused on six SRH categories. We validated the approach using two subject matter experts, who independently labeled a sample of 400 sentences. Cohen's kappa values were calculated for each category between the reviewers (menstruation: 1, sexual activity: 0.9499, contraception: 0.9887, folic acid: 1, teratogens: 0.8864, pregnancy: 0.9499). After removing the sentences on which reviewers did not agree, we compared the reviewers' labels to those produced via our methodology, again using Cohen's kappa (menstruation: 1, sexual activity: 1, contraception: 0.9885, folic acid: 1, teratogens: 0.9841, pregnancy: 0.9871).

Conclusion Our methodology is reproducible, enables analysis of large amounts of text, and has produced results that are highly comparable to subject matter expert manual review.

Note

This work was presented as a poster at the American Epilepsy Society 2022 Annual Meeting.




Publication History

Received: 31 December 2022

Accepted: 19 December 2023

Accepted Manuscript online:
20 December 2023

Article published online:
20 February 2024

© 2024. Thieme. All rights reserved.

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Rüdigerstraße 14, 70469 Stuttgart, Germany

 
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