Real-time clinical note monitoring to detect conditions for rapid follow-up: A case study of clinical trial enrollment in drug-induced torsades de pointes and Stevens-Johnson syndrome

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Abstract

Identifying acute events as they occur is challenging in large hospital systems. Here, we describe an automated method to detect 2 rare adverse drug events (ADEs), drug-induced torsades de pointes and Stevens-Johnson syndrome and toxic epidermal necrolysis, in near real time for participant recruitment into prospective clinical studies. A text processing system searched clinical notes from the electronic health record (EHR) for relevant keywords and alerted study personnel via email of potential patients for chart review or in-person evaluation. Between 2016 and 2018, the automated recruitment system resulted in capture of 138 true cases of drug-induced rare events, improving recall from 43% to 93%. Our focused electronic alert system maintained 2-year enrollment, including across an EHR migration from a bespoke system to Epic. Real-time monitoring of EHR notes may accelerate research for certain conditions less amenable to conventional study recruitment paradigms.

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APA

Delozier, S., Speltz, P., Brito, J., Tang, L. A., Wang, J., Smith, J. C., … Denny, J. C. (2021). Real-time clinical note monitoring to detect conditions for rapid follow-up: A case study of clinical trial enrollment in drug-induced torsades de pointes and Stevens-Johnson syndrome. Journal of the American Medical Informatics Association, 28(1), 126–131. https://doi.org/10.1093/jamia/ocaa213

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