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Notifiable Diseases/Conditions. Surveillance for notifiable conditions traditionally includes manual reporting using written case definitionsThe availability of laboratory data in electronic format makes automated reporting feasibleMapping of notifiable conditions to standard vocabularies are requ
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1. An Efficient Approach To Map LOINC Concepts To Notifiable Conditions Wei Li, MD1, Jerome I. Tokars, MD, MPH1,
Nikolay Lipskiy, DrPH1, Sundak Ganesan, MD2
1. Division of emergency Response and Preparedness
National Center for Public Health Informatics (NCPHI)
Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC)
2. SAIC Consultant to NCPHI, CDC
2. Notifiable Diseases/Conditions Surveillance for notifiable conditions traditionally includes manual reporting using written case definitions
The availability of laboratory data in electronic format makes automated reporting feasible
Mapping of notifiable conditions to standard vocabularies are required
A table mapping notifiable diseases to LOINC (laboratory) and SNOMED (organism) codes was first made by Dianne Dwyer in later 1990s and last updated in 2004
3. Purposes of Mapping A tool to filter the messages from public health and clinical labs to identify laboratory test results of public health importance
BioSense receives laboratory test results from 30 hospitals and from a large national laboratory—need to automatically identify results that MAY indicate a notifiable condition
43 pathogens that cause notifable conditions are also Category A, B, or C Bioterrorism Agents (73%)
Electronic laboratory report (ELR) and interoperability
A framework for the development and maintenance of a controlled vocabulary for reportable events of public health importance
Developing reusable component for intelligent surveillance information system architectures
Towards development of notifiable disease controlled vocabulary for Unified Medical Language System (UMLS)
4. Objective To develop a method to map Logical Observation Identifier Names and Codes (LOINC) to notifiable conditions
Efficient
Easy to update
5. Notifiable Diseases and Other Conditions of Public Health Importance Notifiable Diseases and Other Conditions of Public Health Importance (n=152)
Reportable either nationally (n=86) or to states
Active and inactive
Infectious diseases, injuries, toxins
6. Event Code List: Notifiable Diseases and Other Conditions of Public Health Importance
7. Event Code List Event Code changes year to year
Retire and replace
Enterohemorrhagic Escherichia Coli (EHEC) O157:H7 (10560,11562, 11564) were added in 1994 but retired in 2006
Shiga toxin-producing Escherichia Coli (STEC) was added in 2006
New code
Polyovirus infection, nonparalytic (10405) was added in 2007.
8. Logical Observation Identifiers Names and Codes (LOINC®)* A standard vocabulary identifies laboratory tests and clinical observations
A common language for building electronic medical records
Founded in 1994 and initial release in 1995 with 6,000 lab tests
The latest release (v2.21) covered 48,043 terms
Allow users to merge clinical results from many sources into one database for patient care, clinical research, or management.
9. LOINC to Condition Mapping Tables
Component of Public Health Information Network (PHIN)
Original version by Dr. Dwyer, updated by Dr. Sable
Last updated by PHIN in 2004
LOINC
There are 46,812 terms in the LOINC version 2.19, which revealed 11,972 new terms added (34% increase) since 2004
> 12,000 terms have been deprecated since then
LOINC has changed the properties of its database and expanded its fields to 61 LOINC to Notifiable Conditions Mapping
10. List of 152 Notifiable Diseases and Other Conditions of Public Health Importance
Excluded events without lab test or unknown organism
Silicosis, Spinal cord injury, and Head Injury, etc
Kawasaki Disease, Reye Syndrome, etc
List to be mapped includes 146 conditions
All nationally notifiable infectious diseases
46 Other infectious diseases
7 Toxins
Determine organisms related to each disease
Find Systematized Nomenclature of Medicine (SNOMED) codes for organisms
Map tests for organisms/toxins to LOINC codes by 3 methods
11. Mapping Methods (continued) The Regenstrief LOINC Mapping Assistant (RELMA v3.19) was used to identify lab tests and LOINC codes associated with each organism/toxin
A SAS (v9.1.3) program was developed to perform a text search of the LOINC database to find words that matched notifiable conditions or microorganisms
Manual process
12. Manual process. Check the following LOINC database fields against the list of notifiable conditions
Component
Method Type
Class
Date Last Changed
Map To
Short Name
Related Names 2
Mapping Methods (continued)
13. RELMA v3.19
14. Results: Comparison of Mapping Tables
15. Comparison of Mapping Methods
16. Text Search The text search parsing program found only 4901 LOINC
451 LOINC entries not found by text search most had a non-specific test name, e.g.
Code 33700-6 (a spore identification test) is used to identify Anthrax
Search field does not contain the word that used for searching, e.g. “anthrax”
18. Product: LOINC to Condition Table Data Dictionary
19. Product: LOINC to Condition Table Data Dictionary
20. Conclusions Compared with the 2004 LOINC to Condition Table, our 2007 table added >2000 entries and deleted >200.
The methods we used were labor intensive but currently necessary
Efforts to improve the text search method by adding additional search terms such as “spore” may enable more frequent automated updates.
In the interim, the use of RELMA to identify lab tests provides an accurate and efficient semi-automated process to update the LOINC to Condition Mapping Table
21. Future Plans Update LOINC to Notifiable Conditions Mapping Table to latest LOINC version 2.21
Re-create/modify the text search program to increase accuracy
Explore programs other than SAS to perform text searches
Incorporate terms in the latest release of SNOMED
Ultimately, use updated mapping table to improve laboratory-based surveillance