NLP Methods for Extraction of Symptoms from Unstructured Data for Use in Prognostic COVID-19 Analytic Models

Silverman, Greg M. | Sahoo, Himanshu S. (NLP/IE Program, Department of Electrical and Computer Engineering, University of Minnesota) | Ingraham, Nicholas E. (Division of Pulmonary, Allergy, Critical Care, and Sleep Medicine, University of Minnesota) | Lupei, Monica (Division of Critical Care, Department of Anesthesiology, University of Minnesota) | Puskarich, Michael A. (Department of Emergency Medicine, University of Minnesota) | Usher, Michael (Department of Medicine, University of Minnesota) | Dries, James (University of Minnesota) | Finzel, Raymond L. (NLP/IE Program, College of Pharmacy, University of Minnesota) | Murray, Eric (Information Technology, M Health Fairview) | Sartori, John (Department of Electrical and Computer Engineering, University of Minnesota) | Simon, Gyorgy (Institute for Health Informatics, University of Minnesota ) | Zhang, Rui | Melton, Genevieve B. (NLP/IE Program, Department of Surgery, and Institute for Health Informatics, University of Minnesota, Fairview Health Services, Information Technology) | Tignanelli, Christopher J. (NLP/IE Program, Department of Surgery, University of Minnesota ) | Pakhomov, Serguei VS (NLP/IE Program, College of Pharmacy, University of Minnesota )

Journal of Artificial Intelligence Research 

Statistical modeling of outcomes based on a patient's presenting symptoms (symptomatology) can help deliver high quality care and allocate essential resources, which is especially important during the COVID-19 pandemic. Patient symptoms are typically found in unstructured notes, and thus not readily available for clinical decision making. In an attempt to fill this gap, this study compared two methods for symptom extraction from Emergency Department (ED) admission notes. Both methods utilized a lexicon derived by expanding The Center for Disease Control and Prevention's (CDC) Symptoms of Coronavirus list. The first method utilized a word2vec model to expand the lexicon using a dictionary mapping to the Uni ed Medical Language System (UMLS). The second method utilized the expanded lexicon as a rule-based gazetteer and the UMLS. These methods were evaluated against a manually annotated reference (f1-score of 0.87 for UMLS-based ensemble; and 0.85 for rule-based gazetteer with UMLS). Through analyses of associations of extracted symptoms used as features against various outcomes, salient risks among the population of COVID-19 patients, including increased risk of in-hospital mortality (OR 1.85, p-value < 0.001), were identified for patients presenting with dyspnea. Disparities between English and non-English speaking patients were also identified, the most salient being a concerning finding of opposing risk signals between fatigue and in-hospital mortality (non-English: OR 1.95, p-value = 0.02; English: OR 0.63, p-value = 0.01). While use of symptomatology for modeling of outcomes is not unique, unlike previous studies this study showed that models built using symptoms with the outcome of in-hospital mortality were not significantly different from models using data collected during an in-patient encounter (AUC of 0.9 with 95% CI of [0.88, 0.91] using only vital signs; AUC of 0.87 with 95% CI of [0.85, 0.88] using only symptoms). These findings indicate that prognostic models based on symptomatology could aid in extending COVID-19 patient care through telemedicine, replacing the need for in-person options. The methods presented in this study have potential for use in development of symptomatology-based models for other diseases, including for the study of Post-Acute Sequelae of COVID-19 (PASC).