Institute of Radiation-Oncology, Kantonsspital St. Gallen, St. Gallen, Switzerland.
Institute of Radiation-Oncology, Inselspital, Bern University Hospital and University of Bern, Bern, Switzerland.
Oncology. 2024;102(4):327-336. doi: 10.1159/000534204. Epub 2023 Sep 20.
Documentation as well as IT-based management of medical data is of ever-increasing relevance in modern medicine. As radiation oncology is a rather technical, data-driven discipline, standardization, and data exchange are in principle possible. We examined electronic healthcare documents to extract structured information. Planning CT order entry documents were chosen for the analysis, as this covers a common and structured step in radiation oncology, for which standardized documentation may be achieved. The aim was to examine the extent to which relevant information may be exchanged among different institutions.
We contacted representatives of nine radiation oncology departments. Departments using standardized electronic documentation for planning CT were asked to provide templates of their records, which were analyzed in terms of form and content. Structured information was extracted by identifying definite common data elements, containing explicit information. Relevant common data elements were identified and classified. A quantitative analysis was performed to evaluate the possibility of data exchange.
We received data of seven documents that were heterogeneous regarding form and content. 181 definite common data elements considered relevant for the planning CT were identified and assorted into five semantic groups. 139 data elements (76.8%) were present in only one document. The other 42 data elements were present in two to six documents, while none was shared among all seven documents.
Structured and interoperable documentation of medical information can be achieved using common data elements. Our analysis showed that a lot of information recorded with healthcare documents can be presented with this approach. Yet, in the analyzed cohort of planning CT order entries, only a few common data elements were shared among the majority of documents. A common vocabulary and consensus upon relevant information is required to promote interoperability and standardization.
在现代医学中,医学专业文献的记录以及基于 IT 的管理变得越来越重要。由于放射肿瘤学是一个技术含量较高、数据驱动的学科,因此原则上可以实现标准化和数据交换。我们检查了电子医疗文档以提取结构化信息。选择计划 CT 订单录入文档进行分析,因为这涵盖了放射肿瘤学中的一个常见且结构化的步骤,可以实现标准化文档。目的是检查在多大程度上可以在不同机构之间交换相关信息。
我们联系了 9 个放射肿瘤学部门的代表。要求使用标准化电子文档进行计划 CT 的部门提供其记录的模板,然后对这些模板进行形式和内容分析。通过识别包含明确信息的明确通用数据元素来提取结构化信息。确定并分类了相关的通用数据元素。进行了定量分析以评估数据交换的可能性。
我们收到了七个文档的数据,这些数据在形式和内容上存在差异。确定了 181 个被认为与计划 CT 相关的明确通用数据元素,并将其分为五个语义组。139 个数据元素(76.8%)仅存在于一个文档中。其他 42 个数据元素存在于两个至六个文档中,而没有一个数据元素存在于所有七个文档中。
使用通用数据元素可以实现结构化和互操作的医疗信息记录。我们的分析表明,使用这种方法可以呈现医疗文档中记录的大量信息。然而,在分析的计划 CT 订单录入队列中,只有少数通用数据元素在大多数文档中共享。需要通用词汇表和对相关信息的共识,以促进互操作性和标准化。