UK phenomics platform for developing and validating electronic health record phenotypes: CALIBER

Spiros Denaxas(British Heart Foundation), Arturo González-Izquierdo(National Institute for Health and Care Research), Kenan Direk(National Institute for Health and Care Research), Natalie Fitzpatrick(Health Data Research UK), Ghazaleh Fatemifar(Health Data Research UK), Amitava Banerjee(British Heart Foundation), Richard Dobson(King's College London), Laurence J Howe(University College London), Valerie Kuan(Health Data Research UK), R Tom Lumbers(British Heart Foundation), Laura Pasea(Health Data Research UK), Riyaz Patel(British Heart Foundation), Anoop D Shah(British Heart Foundation), Aroon D. Hingorani(Health Data Research UK), Cathie Sudlow(Health Data Research UK), Harry Hemingway(British Heart Foundation)
Journal of the American Medical Informatics Association
May 30, 2019
Cited by 254Open Access
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Abstract

OBJECTIVE: Electronic health records (EHRs) are a rich source of information on human diseases, but the information is variably structured, fragmented, curated using different coding systems, and collected for purposes other than medical research. We describe an approach for developing, validating, and sharing reproducible phenotypes from national structured EHR in the United Kingdom with applications for translational research. MATERIALS AND METHODS: We implemented a rule-based phenotyping framework, with up to 6 approaches of validation. We applied our framework to a sample of 15 million individuals in a national EHR data source (population-based primary care, all ages) linked to hospitalization and death records in England. Data comprised continuous measurements (for example, blood pressure; medication information; coded diagnoses, symptoms, procedures, and referrals), recorded using 5 controlled clinical terminologies: (1) read (primary care, subset of SNOMED-CT [Systematized Nomenclature of Medicine Clinical Terms]), (2) International Classification of Diseases-Ninth Revision and Tenth Revision (secondary care diagnoses and cause of mortality), (3) Office of Population Censuses and Surveys Classification of Surgical Operations and Procedures, Fourth Revision (hospital surgical procedures), and (4) DM+D prescription codes. RESULTS: Using the CALIBER phenotyping framework, we created algorithms for 51 diseases, syndromes, biomarkers, and lifestyle risk factors and provide up to 6 validation approaches. The EHR phenotypes are curated in the open-access CALIBER Portal (https://www.caliberresearch.org/portal) and have been used by 40 national and international research groups in 60 peer-reviewed publications. CONCLUSIONS: We describe a UK EHR phenomics approach within the CALIBER EHR data platform with initial evidence of validity and use, as an important step toward international use of UK EHR data for health research.


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