@article {1151, title = {A long journey to short abbreviations: developing an open-source framework for clinical abbreviation recognition and disambiguation (CARD).}, journal = {J Am Med Inform Assoc}, year = {2016}, month = {2016 Aug 18}, abstract = {

OBJECTIVE: The goal of this study was to develop a practical framework for recognizing and disambiguating clinical abbreviations, thereby improving current clinical natural language processing (NLP) systems{\textquoteright} capability to handle abbreviations in clinical narratives.

METHODS: We developed an open-source framework for clinical abbreviation recognition and disambiguation (CARD) that leverages our previously developed methods, including: (1) machine learning based approaches to recognize abbreviations from a clinical corpus, (2) clustering-based semiautomated methods to generate possible senses of abbreviations, and (3) profile-based word sense disambiguation methods for clinical abbreviations. We applied CARD to clinical corpora from Vanderbilt University Medical Center (VUMC) and generated 2 comprehensive sense inventories for abbreviations in discharge summaries and clinic visit notes. Furthermore, we developed a wrapper that integrates CARD with MetaMap, a widely used general clinical NLP system.Results and Conclusion CARD detected 27 317 and 107 303 distinct abbreviations from discharge summaries and clinic visit notes, respectively. Two sense inventories were constructed for the 1000 most frequent abbreviations in these 2 corpora. Using the sense inventories created from discharge summaries, CARD achieved an F1 score of 0.755 for identifying and disambiguating all abbreviations in a corpus from the VUMC discharge summaries, which is superior to MetaMap and Apache{\textquoteright}s clinical Text Analysis Knowledge Extraction System (cTAKES). Using additional external corpora, we also demonstrated that the MetaMap-CARD wrapper improved MetaMap{\textquoteright}s performance in recognizing disorder entities in clinical notes. The CARD framework, 2 sense inventories, and the wrapper for MetaMap are publicly available at https://sbmi.uth.edu/ccb/resources/abbreviation.htm We believe the CARD framework can be a valuable resource for improving abbreviation identification in clinical NLP systems.

}, issn = {1527-974X}, doi = {10.1093/jamia/ocw109}, author = {Wu, Yonghui and Denny, Joshua C and Rosenbloom, S Trent and Miller, Randolph A and Giuse, Dario A and Wang, Lulu and Blanquicett, Carmelo and Soysal, Ergin and Xu, Jun and Xu, Hua} }