Using machine learning to standardize medication records in a pan-Canadian electronic medical record database: a data-driven algorithm study focused on antibiotics prescribed in primary care.

CMAJ Open

Department of Family Medicine (Garies, Soos, Drummond), University of Calgary, Calgary, Alta.; Departments of Family Medicine (Taylor, Lindeman, Drummond) and Physical Therapy (Lindeman, Pham), University of Alberta, Edmonton, Alta.; Department of Community Health Sciences (Drummond, Aponte-Hao, Williamson) and Centre for Health Informatics (Williamson), University of Calgary, Calgary, Alta.

Published: October 2023

Background: Most antibiotics dispensed by community pharmacies in Canada are prescribed by family physicians, but using the prescribing information contained within primary care electronic medical records (EMRs) for secondary purposes can be challenging owing to variable data quality. We used antibiotic medications as an exemplar to validate a machine-learning approach for cleaning and coding medication data in a pan-Canadian primary care EMR database.

Methods: The Canadian Primary Care Sentinel Surveillance Network database contained an estimated 42 million medication records, which we mapped to an Anatomic Therapeutic Chemical (ATC) code by applying a semisupervised classification model developed using reference standard labels derived from the Health Canada Drug Product Database. We validated the resulting ATC codes in a subset of antibiotic records (16 119 unique strings) to determine whether the algorithm correctly classified the medication according to manual review of the original medication record.

Results: In the antibiotic subset, the algorithm showed high validity (sensitivity 99.5%, specificity 92.4%, positive predictive value 98.6%, negative predictive value 97.0%) in classifying whether the medication was an antibiotic.

Interpretation: Our machine-learning algorithm classified unstructured antibiotic medication data from primary care with a high degree of accuracy. Access to cleaned EMR data can support important secondary uses, including community-based antibiotic prescribing surveillance and practice improvement.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10620009PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.9778/cmajo.20220235DOI Listing

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