Automatic extraction of 12 cardiovascular concepts from German discharge letters using pre-trained language models

Author:

Richter-Pechanski Phillip1234ORCID,Geis Nicolas A24,Kiriakou Christina2,Schwab Dominic M2,Dieterich Christoph1234

Affiliation:

1. Section of Bioinformatics and Systems Cardiology, Klaus Tschira Institute for Integrative Computational Cardiology, Heidelberg, Germany

2. Department of Internal Medicine III, University Hospital Heidelberg, Heidelberg, Germany

3. German Center for Cardiovascular Research (DZHK) – Partner Site Heidelberg/Mannheim, Mannheim, Germany

4. Informatics for Life, Heidelberg, Germany

Abstract

Objective A vast amount of medical data is still stored in unstructured text documents. We present an automated method of information extraction from German unstructured clinical routine data from the cardiology domain enabling their usage in state-of-the-art data-driven deep learning projects. Methods We evaluated pre-trained language models to extract a set of 12 cardiovascular concepts in German discharge letters. We compared three bidirectional encoder representations from transformers pre-trained on different corpora and fine-tuned them on the task of cardiovascular concept extraction using 204 discharge letters manually annotated by cardiologists at the University Hospital Heidelberg. We compared our results with traditional machine learning methods based on a long short-term memory network and a conditional random field. Results Our best performing model, based on publicly available German pre-trained bidirectional encoder representations from the transformer model, achieved a token-wise micro-average F1-score of 86% and outperformed the baseline by at least 6%. Moreover, this approach achieved the best trade-off between precision (positive predictive value) and recall (sensitivity). Conclusion Our results show the applicability of state-of-the-art deep learning methods using pre-trained language models for the task of cardiovascular concept extraction using limited training data. This minimizes annotation efforts, which are currently the bottleneck of any application of data-driven deep learning projects in the clinical domain for German and many other European languages.

Funder

Bundesministerium für Bildung und Forschung

Klaus Tschira Stiftung

Publisher

SAGE Publications

Subject

Health Information Management,Computer Science Applications,Health Informatics,Health Policy

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