| Literature DB >> 27296450 |
Hannah M Fisher1, Robert Hoehndorf2, Bruno S Bazelato3, Soheil S Dadras4, Lloyd E King5, Georgios V Gkoutos3,6,7, John P Sundberg8, Paul N Schofield9,10.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: There have been repeated initiatives to produce standard nosologies and terminologies for cutaneous disease, some dedicated to the domain and some part of bigger terminologies such as ICD-10. Recently, formally structured terminologies, ontologies, have been widely developed in many areas of biomedical research. Primarily, these address the aim of providing comprehensive working terminologies for domains of knowledge, but because of the knowledge contained in the relationships between terms they can also be used computationally for many purposes.Entities:
Keywords: Dermatology; Dermatopathology; Disease; Ontology
Mesh:
Year: 2016 PMID: 27296450 PMCID: PMC4907256 DOI: 10.1186/s13326-016-0085-x
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Biomed Semantics
Fig. 1Part of the DermO ontology. The ontology classifies cutaneous diseases by etiology, anatomical location/cell type, and phenotype consistent with current clinical practice, and uses polyhierarchy (multiple parents) to maximize the types of knowledge captured by the ontology. The figure shows the path up the hierarchy for the classification of, neutrophilic cicatricial alopecia, with parent terms outlined in red and with a red arrow connecting parents and children. Multiple types of classification allow for multiple entry points and views of diseases. For example Psoriasis is a child of “papulosquamous disorder”, “inflammatory dermatoses”, and “causes of secondary erythroderma”. Most of the relations shown here are “is_a” – ie the child is a “type-of” its parent. Note that not all of the terms in this region of the ontology are shown here, for clarity
Upper level classes of the DermO ontology
| Class | |
|---|---|
| Cutaneous disease | Adnexal disease |
| Anogenital non-venereal disease | |
| Atrophy or disorder of dermal connective tissue | |
| Developmental anomaly | |
| Disorder caused by infections, infestations stings or bites | |
| Disorder due to physical agent | |
| Disorder of hair or nails | |
| Disorder of Langerhans cells or macrophages | |
| Disorder of neoplasm of the skin | |
| Disorders of subcutaneous fat | |
| Genodermatosis | |
| Metabolic or systemic disease | |
| Oral disorder | |
| Papulosquamous or eczematous dermatosis | |
| Pigmentary disorder | |
| Pruritis, dysaesthesia or psychocutaneous disorder | |
| Rheumatological disorder | |
| Urticaria, erythema or purpura | |
| Vascular disorder | |
| Vesiculobullous disease |
The root class is cutaneous disease (DERMO:0000001) with 20 sibling child classes describing the head levels of the axes of classification and include etiology, anatomical location and inheritance, conforming to recognized criteria for classification of dermatological diseases from Bolognia et al. [10]
Cross-ontology mapping of DermO classes
| Ontology | Number of cross-referenced classes |
|---|---|
| Disease Ontology | 1330 |
| Human Phenotype Ontology | 373 |
| MeSH thesaurus | 1509 |
| UMLS | 1398 |
| ICD-10 | 537 |
| DermLex | 1054 |
| SNOMED-CT | 2337 |
| Unreferenced classes | 1773 |
Dermo classes were lexically mapped to a set of related ontologies and mappings subsequently manually checked. Only exact mappings were included but in many cases one DermO term could be mapped to classes in multiple ontologies with the same label or synonym. About half the classes in DermO have no match in the ontologies examined. Mappings are included in the ontology as cross references
Fig. 2The Aber-Owl dermatological disease web page (http://aber-owl.net/aber-owl/dermophenotypes/) allows users to select a disease from the drop down box (view 1) and then retrieve a list of terms form the human or mammalian phenotype ontologies that are associated with it in the literature (view 2). The prioritization of these associations is determined by various metrics described in Hoehndorf et al, [27]. Users are able to reorder depending on the metric they wish to use. Each association can then be related to the Pubmed papers and abstracts that gave rise to it by clicking on the “search” link on the right hand side of the page (view 3)
Fig. 3Clustering of skin diseases on the basis of phenotype similarity. The phenotypic profiles of each disease in DermO are related to each other through the phenotype ontologies and the strength of the association reflected in the presence and length of the lines connecting them. The algorithm for this is described in detail in Hoehndorf et al. [27]. This example shows close clustering of three types of skin disease, carried out automatically on the basis of the spectrum of text-mined phenotypes. This network is based on phenotype/disease associations established using NPMI [28] with phenotypic similarity determined using Phenomenet [36]