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Adverse Drug Event Detection from Electronic Health Records Using Hierarchical Recurrent Neural Networks with Dual-Level Embedding

Author

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  • Susmitha Wunnava

    (Worcester Polytechnic Institute)

  • Xiao Qin

    (Worcester Polytechnic Institute)

  • Tabassum Kakar

    (Worcester Polytechnic Institute)

  • Cansu Sen

    (Worcester Polytechnic Institute)

  • Elke A. Rundensteiner

    (Worcester Polytechnic Institute)

  • Xiangnan Kong

    (Worcester Polytechnic Institute)

Abstract

Introduction Adverse drug event (ADE) detection is a vital step towards effective pharmacovigilance and prevention of future incidents caused by potentially harmful ADEs. The electronic health records (EHRs) of patients in hospitals contain valuable information regarding ADEs and hence are an important source for detecting ADE signals. However, EHR texts tend to be noisy. Yet applying off-the-shelf tools for EHR text preprocessing jeopardizes the subsequent ADE detection performance, which depends on a well tokenized text input. Objective In this paper, we report our experience with the NLP Challenges for Detecting Medication and Adverse Drug Events from Electronic Health Records (MADE1.0), which aims to promote deep innovations on this subject. In particular, we have developed rule-based sentence and word tokenization techniques to deal with the noise in the EHR text. Methods We propose a detection methodology by adapting a three-layered, deep learning architecture of (1) recurrent neural network [bi-directional long short-term memory (Bi-LSTM)] for character-level word representation to encode the morphological features of the medical terminology, (2) Bi-LSTM for capturing the contextual information of each word within a sentence, and (3) conditional random fields for the final label prediction by also considering the surrounding words. We experiment with different word embedding methods commonly used in word-level classification tasks and demonstrate the impact of an integrated usage of both domain-specific and general-purpose pre-trained word embedding for detecting ADEs from EHRs. Results Our system was ranked first for the named entity recognition task in the MADE1.0 challenge, with a micro-averaged F1-score of 0.8290 (official score). Conclusion Our results indicate that the integration of two widely used sequence labeling techniques that complement each other along with dual-level embedding (character level and word level) to represent words in the input layer results in a deep learning architecture that achieves excellent information extraction accuracy for EHR notes.

Suggested Citation

  • Susmitha Wunnava & Xiao Qin & Tabassum Kakar & Cansu Sen & Elke A. Rundensteiner & Xiangnan Kong, 2019. "Adverse Drug Event Detection from Electronic Health Records Using Hierarchical Recurrent Neural Networks with Dual-Level Embedding," Drug Safety, Springer, vol. 42(1), pages 113-122, January.
  • Handle: RePEc:spr:drugsa:v:42:y:2019:i:1:d:10.1007_s40264-018-0765-9
    DOI: 10.1007/s40264-018-0765-9
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    Cited by:

    1. Feifan Liu & Abhyuday Jagannatha & Hong Yu, 2019. "Towards Drug Safety Surveillance and Pharmacovigilance: Current Progress in Detecting Medication and Adverse Drug Events from Electronic Health Records," Drug Safety, Springer, vol. 42(1), pages 95-97, January.
    2. Shungo Imai & Yoh Takekuma & Hitoshi Kashiwagi & Takayuki Miyai & Masaki Kobayashi & Ken Iseki & Mitsuru Sugawara, 2020. "Validation of the usefulness of artificial neural networks for risk prediction of adverse drug reactions used for individual patients in clinical practice," PLOS ONE, Public Library of Science, vol. 15(7), pages 1-12, July.
    3. Heba Edrees & Wenyu Song & Ania Syrowatka & Aurélien Simona & Mary G. Amato & David W. Bates, 2022. "Intelligent Telehealth in Pharmacovigilance: A Future Perspective," Drug Safety, Springer, vol. 45(5), pages 449-458, May.
    4. Likeng Liang & Jifa Hu & Gang Sun & Na Hong & Ge Wu & Yuejun He & Yong Li & Tianyong Hao & Li Liu & Mengchun Gong, 2022. "Artificial Intelligence-Based Pharmacovigilance in the Setting of Limited Resources," Drug Safety, Springer, vol. 45(5), pages 511-519, May.

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