Disambiguating Clinical Abbreviations Using a One-Fits-All Classifier Based on Deep Learning Techniques

Author:

Jaber Areej12,Martínez Paloma2

Affiliation:

1. Applied Computing Department, Palestine Technical University - Kadoorie, Tulkarem, Palestine

2. Department of Computer Science, Universidad Carlos III de Madrid, Leganés, Spain

Abstract

Abstract Background Abbreviations are considered an essential part of the clinical narrative; they are used not only to save time and space but also to hide serious or incurable illnesses. Misreckoning interpretation of the clinical abbreviations could affect different aspects concerning patients themselves or other services like clinical support systems. There is no consensus in the scientific community to create new abbreviations, making it difficult to understand them. Disambiguate clinical abbreviations aim to predict the exact meaning of the abbreviation based on context, a crucial step in understanding clinical notes. Objectives Disambiguating clinical abbreviations is an essential task in information extraction from medical texts. Deep contextualized representations models showed promising results in most word sense disambiguation tasks. In this work, we propose a one-fits-all classifier to disambiguate clinical abbreviations with deep contextualized representation from pretrained language models like Bidirectional Encoder Representation from Transformers (BERT). Methods A set of experiments with different pretrained clinical BERT models were performed to investigate fine-tuning methods on the disambiguation of clinical abbreviations. One-fits-all classifiers were used to improve disambiguating rare clinical abbreviations. Results One-fits-all classifiers with deep contextualized representations from Bioclinical, BlueBERT, and MS_BERT pretrained models improved the accuracy using the University of Minnesota data set. The model achieved 98.99, 98.75, and 99.13%, respectively. All the models outperform the state-of-the-art in the previous work of around 98.39%, with the best accuracy using the MS_BERT model. Conclusion Deep contextualized representations via fine-tuning of pretrained language modeling proved its sufficiency on disambiguating clinical abbreviations; it could be robust for rare and unseen abbreviations and has the advantage of avoiding building a separate classifier for each abbreviation. Transfer learning can improve the development of practical abbreviation disambiguation systems.

Funder

the Madrid Government (Comunidad de Madrid-Spain) under the Multiannual Agreement with UC3M in the line of Excellence of University Professors

Publisher

Georg Thieme Verlag KG

Subject

Health Information Management,Advanced and Specialized Nursing,Health Informatics

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1. Leveraging Large Language Models for Clinical Abbreviation Disambiguation;Journal of Medical Systems;2024-02-27

2. O2 supplementation disambiguation in clinical narratives to support retrospective COVID-19 studies;BMC Medical Informatics and Decision Making;2024-01-31

3. An Unsupervised Clinical Acronym Disambiguation Method Based on Pretrained Language Model;Communications in Computer and Information Science;2024

4. Sequence Labeling for Disambiguating Medical Abbreviations;Journal of Healthcare Informatics Research;2023-09-14

5. Disambiguation of medical abbreviations for knowledge organization;Information Processing & Management;2023-09

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