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Toward an Ontology for General Medical Science SSFW09 September 4, 2009 William Hogan, MD, MS Associate Professor of Biomedical Informatics University of Pittsburgh Outline • What, Why, Who • Progress to Date • Proposals Ontology for General Medical Science (OGMS) A small, upper-level ontology for the domain of clinical medicine and research Why • Define general terms in medicine • Serve as anchor point for domain ontologies: medication, disease, laboratory test • Serve as a common, upper-level ontology that bridges clinical medicine and basic science • Continue the work begun—and give unique, machine-readable identifiers to the terms—in: – Scheuermann et al. Towards an Ontological Treatment of Disease and Diagnosis. Proceedings, AMIA Translational Summit, 2009. – Smith et al. On carcinomas and other pathological entities. Compar Func Genom. 2005;6(7-8):379-97. Evidence of the Need for OGMS Haemodialysis Haemofiltration Peritoneal Dialysis Artificial ventilation Chest drain Oral Intravenous Intramuscular Per rectum Requests for terms Nasogastric tube such as these requires an organized, Cutaneous logical Local approach to clinical medicine in the OBO Foundry. Sublingual Intrathecal OGMS is the first step! Intravitreol Pericardial drain Heat therapy Surgical debridement ECMO Trans-urtheral urinary catheter Suprapubic urinary catheter Naso-gastric tube Therapeutic lumbar puncture/lumbar drain Maggot therapy (apologies !) OGMS Does… • Include definitions for high-level types such as – – – – – Disease Disorder Sign Symptom Finding • Follow the OBO Foundry principles • Use BFO/RO as starting point • Have Aristotelian text definitions for each term OBO Foundry Principles Now Soon Principle Clearly specified and clearly delineated content Textual definitions for all terms Uses relations from the Relation Ontology Open and available to all without constraint Common, shared syntax Unique identifier space within Foundry Procedure for identifying distinct successive versions Well documented Plurality of independent users Developed collaboratively Who • • • • • • • • • Albert Goldfain: Coordinator/Owner Alan Ruttenburg (Science Commons): Owner Barry Smith Werner Ceusters Richard Scheuerman (University of Texas Southwestern Medical Center) Lindsay Cowell (Duke) Sivaram Arabandi (Case Western) Myself You! Who • • • • • • • • • Albert Goldfain: Coordinator/Owner Alan Ruttenburg (Science Commons): Owner Barry Smith Close coordination with OBI Werner Ceusters and IDO to avoid violating Richard Scheuerman (University of Texas Southwestern orthogonality. Medical Center) Lindsay Cowell (Duke) Sivaram Arabandi (Case Western) Myself You! We are NOT • Creating a giant, ‘ontology of everything’ • Fighting a turf war for particular terms • Violating the principle of orthogonality Progress to Date • Aristotelian text definitions for 44 terms • Terms represented in OBO/OWL format • Ontology page on Google code: http://code.google.com/p/ogms/ • Open under Creative Commons 3.0 license Some of the Terms disease disease course clinical manifestation diagnosis clinical history preclinical manifestation sign vital sign clinical history taking symptom normal value physical examination clinical finding preclinical finding laboratory finding disorder genetic disorder epigenetic disorder homeostasis laboratory test pathological anatomical structure abnormal homeostasis clinical phenotype predisposition to disease of type X Definitions • Disorder: a causally relatively isolated combination of physical components that is (i) clinically abnormal and (ii) maximal, in the sense that it is not part of some larger combination. • Disease: A disposition (i) to undergo pathological processes that (ii) exists in an organism because of one or more disorders in that organism. Definitions • Disease course: the totality of all processes through which a given disease is realized. • Diagnosis: the conclusion of an interpretive process that has as input a clinical picture of a given patient and as output an assertion to the effect that the patient has a disease of such and such a type. Definitions • Sign: a bodily feature of a patient that is observed in physical examination and is deemed by the clinician to be of clinical One proposal is to significance. modify symptom to be a subject • Symptom: A bodily feature of a patient that is of the observed by a patientexperience and is hypothesized by patient the patient to be a realization of a disease. Proposals • Avoid the terms genotype and clinical phenotype (is there a real distinction?) • Modify the definition of symptom to mention subjective experience of patient • New terms: – – – – – – Drug/medication Drug administration Patient Provider Surgical procedure Complication: predisposition to disease of type X because of disease of type Y – Pain – Encounter – Order Acknowledgements • • • • • • All the attendees of the Dallas workshop Werner Ceusters Albert Goldfain Alan Ruttenberg Richard Scheuermann Barry Smith Definitions • Sign: a bodily feature of a patient that is observed in physical examination and is deemed by the clinician to be of clinical significance. • Symptom: A bodily feature of a patient that is observed by a patient and is hypothesized by the patient to be a realization of a disease.