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Development of a Controlled Vocabulary-Based Adverse Drug Reaction Signal Dictionary for Multicenter Electronic Health Record-Based Pharmacovigilance

Author

Listed:
  • Suehyun Lee

    (Seoul National University Biomedical Informatics (SNUBI), Seoul National University College of Medicine
    Konyang University)

  • Jongsoo Han

    (Seoul National University Biomedical Informatics (SNUBI), Seoul National University College of Medicine)

  • Rae Woong Park

    (Ajou University School of Medicine)

  • Grace Juyun Kim

    (Seoul National University Biomedical Informatics (SNUBI), Seoul National University College of Medicine)

  • John Hoon Rim

    (Yonsei University College of Medicine
    Yonsei University Graduate School of Medicine
    Yonsei University College of Medicine)

  • Jooyoung Cho

    (Yonsei University Graduate School of Medicine
    Yonsei University Wonju College of Medicine)

  • Kye Hwa Lee

    (Seoul National University Biomedical Informatics (SNUBI), Seoul National University College of Medicine
    Seoul National University Hospital)

  • Jisan Lee

    (Catholic University of Pusan)

  • Sujeong Kim

    (Seattle University)

  • Ju Han Kim

    (Seoul National University Biomedical Informatics (SNUBI), Seoul National University College of Medicine
    Seoul National University Hospital)

Abstract

Introduction Integration of controlled vocabulary-based electronic health record (EHR) observational data is essential for real-time large-scale pharmacovigilance studies. Objective To provide a semantically enriched adverse drug reaction (ADR) dictionary for post-market drug safety research and enable multicenter EHR-based extensive ADR signal detection and evaluation, we developed a comprehensive controlled vocabulary-based ADR signal dictionary (CVAD) for pharmacovigilance. Methods A CVAD consists of (1) administrative disease classifications of the International Classification of Diseases (ICD) codes mapped to the Medical Dictionary for Regulatory Activities Preferred Terms (MedDRA® PTs); (2) two teaching hospitals’ codes for laboratory test results mapped to the Logical Observation Identifiers Names and Codes (LOINC) terms and MedDRA® PTs; and (3) clinical narratives and ADRs encoded by standard nursing statements (encoded by the International Classification for Nursing Practice [ICNP]) mapped to the World Health Organization–Adverse Reaction Terminology (WHO-ART) terms and MedDRA® PTs. Results Of the standard 4514 MedDRA® PTs from Side Effect Resources (SIDER) 4.1, 1130 (25.03%), 942 (20.86%), and 83 (1.83%) terms were systematically mapped to clinical narratives, laboratory test results, and disease classifications, respectively. For the evaluation, we loaded multi-source EHR data. We first performed a clinical expert review of the CVAD clinical relevance and a three-drug ADR case analyses consisting of linezolid-induced thrombocytopenia, warfarin-induced bleeding tendency, and vancomycin-induced acute kidney injury. Conclusion CVAD had a high coverage of ADRs and integrated standard controlled vocabularies to the EHR data sources, and researchers can take advantage of these features for EHR observational data-based extensive pharmacovigilance studies to improve sensitivity and specificity.

Suggested Citation

  • Suehyun Lee & Jongsoo Han & Rae Woong Park & Grace Juyun Kim & John Hoon Rim & Jooyoung Cho & Kye Hwa Lee & Jisan Lee & Sujeong Kim & Ju Han Kim, 2019. "Development of a Controlled Vocabulary-Based Adverse Drug Reaction Signal Dictionary for Multicenter Electronic Health Record-Based Pharmacovigilance," Drug Safety, Springer, vol. 42(5), pages 657-670, May.
  • Handle: RePEc:spr:drugsa:v:42:y:2019:i:5:d:10.1007_s40264-018-0767-7
    DOI: 10.1007/s40264-018-0767-7
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    Cited by:

    1. Vassilis Koutkias, 2019. "From Data Silos to Standardized, Linked, and FAIR Data for Pharmacovigilance: Current Advances and Challenges with Observational Healthcare Data," Drug Safety, Springer, vol. 42(5), pages 583-586, May.

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