| Literature DB >> 24033988 |
Paul N Schofield1, John P Sundberg, Beth A Sundberg, Colin McKerlie, Georgios V Gkoutos.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: The capture and use of disease-related anatomic pathology data for both model organism phenotyping and human clinical practice requires a relatively simple nomenclature and coding system that can be integrated into data collection platforms (such as computerized medical record-keeping systems) to enable the pathologist to rapidly screen and accurately record observations. The MPATH ontology was originally constructed in 2,000 by a committee of pathologists for the annotation of rodent histopathology images, but is now widely used for coding and analysis of disease and phenotype data for rodents, humans and zebrafish. CONSTRUCTION AND CONTENT: MPATH is divided into two main branches describing pathological processes and structures based on traditional histopathological principles. It does not aim to include definitive diagnoses, which would generally be regarded as disease concepts. It contains 888 core pathology terms in an almost exclusively is_a hierarchy nine layers deep. Currently, 86% of the terms have textual definitions and contain relationships as well as logical axioms to other ontologies such the Gene Ontology. APPLICATION AND UTILITY: MPATH was originally devised for the annotation of histopathological images from mice but is now being used much more widely in the recording of diagnostic and phenotypic data from both mice and humans, and in the construction of logical definitions for phenotype and disease ontologies. We discuss the use of MPATH to generate cross-products with qualifiers derived from a subset of the Phenotype and Trait Ontology (PATO) and its application to large-scale high-throughput phenotyping studies. MPATH provides a largely species-agnostic ontology for the descriptions of anatomic pathology, which can be applied to most amniotes and is now finding extensive use in species other than mice. It enables investigators to interrogate large datasets at a variety of depths, use semantic analysis to identify the relations between diseases in different species and integrate pathology data with other data types, such as pharmacogenomics.Entities:
Year: 2013 PMID: 24033988 PMCID: PMC3851164 DOI: 10.1186/2041-1480-4-18
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Biomed Semantics
Figure 1Structure of MPATH. A; overall structure of the top level classes in MPATH showing division into pathological process and physical entity for the major divisions. B; polyhierarchy showing multiple parentage for some anatomically predicated tumor classes and their anatomical and morphological classification. C; cell and tissue damage process segment of MPATH showing main pathological process classes in this branch.
Examples of pathology term qualifiers now incorporated into PATO
| Severity | 0000461 | Normal | No lesions |
| | 0000394 | Mild | Lesion dependent; often size, number and characteristics. |
| | 0000395 | Moderate | |
| | 0000465 | Marked | |
| | 0000396 | Severe | |
| Duration | 0002387 | Per-acute | Extremely acute and aggressive |
| | 0000389 | Acute | Beginning abruptly with marked intensity |
| | 0002091 | Subacute | Between acute and chronic |
| | 0001863 | Chronic | Slow progress and long continuance |
| | 0002387 | Chronic-active | Coexistence of chronic process and superimposed acute process |
| Distribution | 0000627 | Focal | Single well delineated lesion |
| | 0002388 | Focally extensive | Single lesion with expansion into surrounding tissue |
| | 0001791 | Multifocal | Multiple lesions |
| | 0002389 | Multifocal to coalescing | Multiple lesions some interconnecting with each other |
| | 0000330 | Random | No appreciable pattern |
| | 0001566 | Diffuse | Not circumscribed or limited |
| | 0000635 | Generalized | Affecting all regions without specificity of distribution |
| | 0000634 | Unilateral | Confined to one side only |
| | 0000618 | Bilateral | Involving both sides |
| 0002389 | Segmental | Relating to a segment |
Figure 2Post-composition coding strategy. Elements of the compound description are specified by the string of linked pentagons on the left hand side of the figure and specific examples given for three observations which taken together are indicative of foreign body pneumonia. Tissue terms are taken from the appropriate anatomy ontology, eg. MA, Process from MPATH, character, topology, distribution and severity from PATO. The combination of observations defines the disease foreign body pneumonia.