AI Article Synopsis

  • Evaluated a deidentification engine at UPMC designed to replace identifying text in clinical reports while maintaining essential medical information for research.
  • In initial tests with 967 reports, the software struggled to redact specific identifiers such as names and accession numbers, leading to some inadvertent information suppression.
  • By the final evaluation of 1,000 reports, the system successfully removed most identifiers while keeping the text readable and preserving key clinical details, demonstrating the need for ongoing collaboration and quality assurance in deidentification efforts.

Article Abstract

We evaluated a comprehensive deidentification engine at the University of Pittsburgh Medical Center (UPMC), Pittsburgh, PA, that uses a complex set of rules, dictionaries, pattern-matching algorithms, and the Unified Medical Language System to identify and replace identifying text in clinical reports while preserving medical information for sharing in research. In our initial data set of 967 surgical pathology reports, the software did not suppress outside (103), UPMC (47), and non-UPMC (56) accession numbers; dates (7); names (9) or initials (25) of case pathologists; or hospital or laboratory names (46). In 150 reports, some clinical information was suppressed inadvertently (overmarking). The engine retained eponymic patient names, eg, Barrett and Gleason. In the second evaluation (1,000 reports), the software did not suppress outside (90) or UPMC (6) accession numbers or names (4) or initials (2) of case pathologists. In the third evaluation, the software removed names of patients, hospitals (297/300), pathologists (297/300), transcriptionists, residents and physicians, dates of procedures, and accession numbers (298/300). By the end of the evaluation, the system was reliably and specifically removing safe-harbor identifiers and producing highly readable deidentified text without removing important clinical information. Collaboration between pathology domain experts and system developers and continuous quality assurance are needed to optimize ongoing deidentification processes.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1309/E6K3-3GBP-E5C2-7FYUDOI Listing

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