An informatics consult approach for generating clinical evidence for treatment decisions.
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Authors
Chang, Wai Hoong
Parisinos, Constantinos A
Katsoulis, Michail
Blackburn, Ruth M
Shah, Anoop D
Nguyen, Vincent
Denaxas, Spiros
Davey Smith, George
Gaunt, Tom R
Nirantharakumar, Krishnarajah
Cox, Murray P
Forde, Donall
Asselbergs, Folkert W
Harris, Steve
Richardson, Sylvia
Sofat, Reecha
Dobson, Richard JB
Hingorani, Aroon
Patel, Riyaz
Sterne, Jonathan
Banerjee, Amitava
Denniston, Alastair K
Ball, Simon
Sebire, Neil J
Shah, Nigam H
Foster, Graham R
Williams, Bryan
Hemingway, Harry
Publication Date
2021-10-12Journal Title
BMC Med Inform Decis Mak
ISSN
1472-6947
Publisher
Springer Science and Business Media LLC
Volume
21
Issue
1
Language
eng
Type
Article
This Version
VoR
Metadata
Show full item recordCitation
Lai, A. G., Chang, W. H., Parisinos, C. A., Katsoulis, M., Blackburn, R. M., Shah, A. D., Nguyen, V., et al. (2021). An informatics consult approach for generating clinical evidence for treatment decisions.. BMC Med Inform Decis Mak, 21 (1) https://doi.org/10.1186/s12911-021-01638-z
Abstract
BACKGROUND: An Informatics Consult has been proposed in which clinicians request novel evidence from large scale health data resources, tailored to the treatment of a specific patient. However, the availability of such consultations is lacking. We seek to provide an Informatics Consult for a situation where a treatment indication and contraindication coexist in the same patient, i.e., anti-coagulation use for stroke prevention in a patient with both atrial fibrillation (AF) and liver cirrhosis. METHODS: We examined four sources of evidence for the effect of warfarin on stroke risk or all-cause mortality from: (1) randomised controlled trials (RCTs), (2) meta-analysis of prior observational studies, (3) trial emulation (using population electronic health records (N = 3,854,710) and (4) genetic evidence (Mendelian randomisation). We developed prototype forms to request an Informatics Consult and return of results in electronic health record systems. RESULTS: We found 0 RCT reports and 0 trials recruiting for patients with AF and cirrhosis. We found broad concordance across the three new sources of evidence we generated. Meta-analysis of prior observational studies showed that warfarin use was associated with lower stroke risk (hazard ratio [HR] = 0.71, CI 0.39-1.29). In a target trial emulation, warfarin was associated with lower all-cause mortality (HR = 0.61, CI 0.49-0.76) and ischaemic stroke (HR = 0.27, CI 0.08-0.91). Mendelian randomisation served as a drug target validation where we found that lower levels of vitamin K1 (warfarin is a vitamin K1 antagonist) are associated with lower stroke risk. A pilot survey with an independent sample of 34 clinicians revealed that 85% of clinicians found information on prognosis useful and that 79% thought that they should have access to the Informatics Consult as a service within their healthcare systems. We identified candidate steps for automation to scale evidence generation and to accelerate the return of results. CONCLUSION: We performed a proof-of-concept Informatics Consult for evidence generation, which may inform treatment decisions in situations where there is dearth of randomised trials. Patients are surprised to know that their clinicians are currently not able to learn in clinic from data on 'patients like me'. We identify the key challenges in offering such an Informatics Consult as a service.
Keywords
Anticoagulants, Atrial Fibrillation, Humans, Informatics, Referral and Consultation, Stroke, Treatment Outcome, Warfarin
Sponsorship
Wellcome Trust (204841/Z/16/Z)
Identifiers
PMC8506488, 34641870
External DOI: https://doi.org/10.1186/s12911-021-01638-z
This record's URL: https://www.repository.cam.ac.uk/handle/1810/330805
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