Literature DB >> 33910179

The critical care data exchange format: a proposed flexible data standard for combining clinical and high-frequency physiologic data in critical care.

Philip Laird1,2, Anthony Wertz3, Gus Welter3, David Maslove1,2, Alexander Hamilton2, Joo Heung Yoon4, Douglas E Lake5,6,7, Amanda E Zimmet6,7, Ryan Bobko7, J Randall Moorman6, Michael R Pinsky4, Artur Dubrawski3, Gilles Clermont4.   

Abstract

Objective.To develop a standardized format for exchanging clinical and physiologic data generated in the intensive care unit. Our goal was to develop a format that would accommodate the data collection pipelines of various sites but would not require dataset-specific schemas or ad-hoc tools for decoding and analysis.Approach.A number of centers had independently developed solutions for storing clinical and physiologic data using Hierarchical Data Format-Version 5 (HDF5), a well-supported standard already in use in multiple other fields. These individual solutions involved design choices that made the data difficult to share despite the underlying common framework. A collaborative process was used to form the basis of a proposed standard that would allow for interoperability and data sharing with common analysis tools.Main Results.We developed the HDF5-based critical care data exchange format which stores multiparametric data in an efficient, self-describing, hierarchical structure and supports real-time streaming and compression. In addition to cardiorespiratory and laboratory data, the format can, in future, accommodate other large datasets such as imaging and genomics. We demonstated the feasibility of a standardized format by converting data from three sites as well as the MIMIC III dataset.Significance.Individual approaches to the storage of multiparametric clinical data are proliferating, representing both a duplication of effort and a missed opportunity for collaboration. Adoption of a standardized format for clinical data exchange will enable the development of a digital biobank, facilitate the external validation of machine learning models and be a powerful tool for sharing multiparametric, high frequency patient level data in multisite clinical trials. Our proposed solution focuses on supporting standardized ontologies such as LOINC allowing easy reading of data regardless of the source and in so doing provides a useful method to integrate large amounts of existing data.
© 2021 Institute of Physics and Engineering in Medicine.

Entities:  

Keywords:  ICU; computation medicine; critical care; data science; data sharing; physiological monitoring; precision medicine

Year:  2021        PMID: 33910179     DOI: 10.1088/1361-6579/abfc9b

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Physiol Meas        ISSN: 0967-3334            Impact factor:   2.833


  3 in total

1.  Intelligent Clinical Decision Support.

Authors:  Michael R Pinsky; Artur Dubrawski; Gilles Clermont
Journal:  Sensors (Basel)       Date:  2022-02-12       Impact factor: 3.576

Review 2.  Timing errors and temporal uncertainty in clinical databases-A narrative review.

Authors:  Andrew J Goodwin; Danny Eytan; William Dixon; Sebastian D Goodfellow; Zakary Doherty; Robert W Greer; Alistair McEwan; Mark Tracy; Peter C Laussen; Azadeh Assadi; Mjaye Mazwi
Journal:  Front Digit Health       Date:  2022-08-18

Review 3.  Artificial Intelligence in Critical Care Medicine.

Authors:  Joo Heung Yoon; Michael R Pinsky; Gilles Clermont
Journal:  Crit Care       Date:  2022-03-22       Impact factor: 19.334

  3 in total

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