Author:
Vogelgsang Jonathan S.,Dan Shu,Lally Anna P.,Chatigny Michael,Vempati Sangeetha,Abston Joshua,Durning Peter T.,Oakley Derek H.,McCoy Thomas H.,Klengel Torsten,Berretta Sabina
Abstract
AbstractINTRODUCTIONTransdiagnostic dimensional phenotypes are essential to investigate the relationship between continuous symptom dimensions and pathological changes. This is a fundamental challenge to postmortem work, as assessment of newly developed phenotypic concepts needs to rely on existing records.METHODSWe adapted well-validated methodologies to compute NIMH research domain criteria (RDoC) scores using natural language processing (NLP) from electronic health records (EHRs) obtained from post-mortem brain donors and tested whether RDoC cognitive domain scores were associated with hallmark Alzheimer’s disease (AD) neuropathological measures.RESULTSOur results confirm an association of EHR-derived cognitive scores with hallmark neuropathological findings. Notably, higher neuropathological load, particularly neuritic plaques, was associated with higher cognitive burden scores in the frontal (ß=0.38, p=0.0004), parietal (ß=0.35, p=0.0008), temporal (ß=0.37, p=0. 0004) and occipital (ß=0.37, p=0.0003) lobes.DISCUSSIONThis proof of concept study supports the validity of NLP-based methodologies to obtain quantitative measures of RDoC clinical domains from postmortem EHR.
Publisher
Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory