Extracting and classifying diagnosis dates from clinical notes: A case study.

J Biomed Inform

Department of Health Policy and Research, Weill Cornell Medicine, 402 E. 67th St, New York, NY 10065, United States; Information Technologies & Services, Weill Cornell Medicine, 575 Lexington Ave, 3rd Fl, New York, NY 10022, United States; Clinical and Translational Science Center, Weill Cornell Medicine, 1300 York Ave., Box 149, New York, NY 10065, United States; Department of Pediatrics, Weill Cornell Medicine, 525 E 68th St, Rm M610A, New York, NY 10065, United States. Electronic address:

Published: October 2020

Myeloproliferative neoplasms (MPNs) are chronic hematologic malignancies that may progress over long disease courses. The original date of diagnosis is an important piece of information for patient care and research, but is not consistently documented. We describe an attempt to build a pipeline for extracting dates with natural language processing (NLP) tools and techniques and classifying them as relevant diagnoses or not. Inaccurate and incomplete date extraction and interpretation impacted the performance of the overall pipeline. Existing lightweight Python packages tended to have low specificity for identifying and interpreting partial and relative dates in clinical text. A rules-based regular expression (regex) approach achieved recall of 83.0% on dates manually annotated as diagnosis dates, and 77.4% on all annotated dates. With only 3.8% of annotated dates representing initial MPN diagnoses, additional methods of targeting candidate date instances may alleviate noise and class imbalance.

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http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.jbi.2020.103569DOI Listing

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