Medical records-based chronic kidney disease phenotype for clinical care and “big data” observational and genetic studies

Author:

Shang NingORCID,Khan AtlasORCID,Polubriaginof Fernanda,Zanoni Francesca,Mehl Karla,Fasel DavidORCID,Drawz Paul E.,Carrol Robert J.ORCID,Denny Joshua C.,Hathcock Matthew A.,Arruda-Olson Adelaide M.,Peissig Peggy L.,Dart Richard A.,Brilliant Murray H.,Larson Eric B.,Carrell David S.,Pendergrass Sarah,Verma Shefali Setia,Ritchie Marylyn D.ORCID,Benoit Barbara,Gainer Vivian S.,Karlson Elizabeth W.,Gordon Adam S.,Jarvik Gail P.,Stanaway Ian B.ORCID,Crosslin David R.,Mohan Sumit,Ionita-Laza Iuliana,Tatonetti Nicholas P.,Gharavi Ali G.,Hripcsak George,Weng Chunhua,Kiryluk KrzysztofORCID

Abstract

AbstractChronic Kidney Disease (CKD) represents a slowly progressive disorder that is typically silent until late stages, but early intervention can significantly delay its progression. We designed a portable and scalable electronic CKD phenotype to facilitate early disease recognition and empower large-scale observational and genetic studies of kidney traits. The algorithm uses a combination of rule-based and machine-learning methods to automatically place patients on the staging grid of albuminuria by glomerular filtration rate (“A-by-G” grid). We manually validated the algorithm by 451 chart reviews across three medical systems, demonstrating overall positive predictive value of 95% for CKD cases and 97% for healthy controls. Independent case-control validation using 2350 patient records demonstrated diagnostic specificity of 97% and sensitivity of 87%. Application of the phenotype to 1.3 million patients demonstrated that over 80% of CKD cases are undetected using ICD codes alone. We also demonstrated several large-scale applications of the phenotype, including identifying stage-specific kidney disease comorbidities, in silico estimation of kidney trait heritability in thousands of pedigrees reconstructed from medical records, and biobank-based multicenter genome-wide and phenome-wide association studies.

Funder

U.S. Department of Health & Human Services | NIH | National Human Genome Research Institute

U.S. Department of Health & Human Services | NIH | National Institute of Diabetes and Digestive and Kidney Diseases

U.S. Department of Health & Human Services | NIH | U.S. National Library of Medicine

U.S. Department of Health & Human Services | NIH | National Center for Advancing Translational Sciences

Please see the acknowledgements section of the manuscript for funding details.

Publisher

Springer Science and Business Media LLC

Subject

Health Information Management,Health Informatics,Computer Science Applications,Medicine (miscellaneous)

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