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Assisted Knowledge Discovery for the Maintenance of Clinical Guidelines
Authors:Emilie Pasche  Patrick Ruch  Douglas Teodoro  Angela Huttner  Stephan Harbarth  Julien Gobeill  Rolf Wipfli  Christian Lovis
Institution:1. Division of Medical Information Sciences, University Hospitals of Geneva and University of Geneva, Geneva, Switzerland.; 2. Bibliomics and Text-Mining Group, University of Applied Sciences Western Switzerland, Geneva, Switzerland.; 3. Infection Control Program and Division of Infectious Diseases, University of Geneva Hospitals and Medical School, Geneva, Switzerland.; Royal College of Surgeons, Ireland,
Abstract:

Background

Improving antibiotic prescribing practices is an important public-health priority given the widespread antimicrobial resistance. Establishing clinical practice guidelines is crucial to this effort, but their development is a complex task and their quality is directly related to the methodology and source of knowledge used.

Objective

We present the design and the evaluation of a tool (KART) that aims to facilitate the creation and maintenance of clinical practice guidelines based on information retrieval techniques.

Methods

KART consists of three main modules 1) a literature-based medical knowledge extraction module, which is built upon a specialized question-answering engine; 2) a module to normalize clinical recommendations based on automatic text categorizers; and 3) a module to manage clinical knowledge, which formalizes and stores clinical recommendations for further use. The evaluation of the usability and utility of KART followed the methodology of the cognitive walkthrough.

Results

KART was designed and implemented as a standalone web application. The quantitative evaluation of the medical knowledge extraction module showed that 53% of the clinical recommendations generated by KART are consistent with existing clinical guidelines. The user-based evaluation confirmed this result by showing that KART was able to find a relevant antibiotic for half of the clinical scenarios tested. The automatic normalization of the recommendation produced mixed results among end-users.

Conclusions

We have developed an innovative approach for the process of clinical guidelines development and maintenance in a context where available knowledge is increasing at a rate that cannot be sustained by humans. In contrast to existing knowledge authoring tools, KART not only provides assistance to normalize, formalize and store clinical recommendations, but also aims to facilitate knowledge building.
Keywords:
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