JMIR Medical Informatics (Jun 2021)

The Clinical Decision Support System AMPEL for Laboratory Diagnostics: Implementation and Technical Evaluation

  • Walter Costa, Maria Beatriz,
  • Wernsdorfer, Mark,
  • Kehrer, Alexander,
  • Voigt, Markus,
  • Cundius, Carina,
  • Federbusch, Martin,
  • Eckelt, Felix,
  • Remmler, Johannes,
  • Schmidt, Maria,
  • Pehnke, Sarah,
  • Gärtner, Christiane,
  • Wehner, Markus,
  • Isermann, Berend,
  • Richter, Heike,
  • Telle, Jörg,
  • Kaiser, Thorsten

DOI
https://doi.org/10.2196/20407
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 9, no. 6
p. e20407

Abstract

Read online

BackgroundLaboratory results are of central importance for clinical decision making. The time span between availability and review of results by clinicians is crucial to patient care. Clinical decision support systems (CDSS) are computational tools that can identify critical values automatically and help decrease treatment delay. ObjectiveWith this work, we aimed to implement and evaluate a CDSS that supports health care professionals and improves patient safety. In addition to our experiences, we also describe its main components in a general manner to make it applicable to a wide range of medical institutions and to empower colleagues to implement a similar system in their facilities. MethodsTechnical requirements must be taken into account before implementing a CDSS that performs laboratory diagnostics (labCDSS). These can be planned within the functional components of a reactive software agent, a computational framework for such a CDSS. ResultsWe present AMPEL (Analysis and Reporting System for the Improvement of Patient Safety through Real-Time Integration of Laboratory Findings), a labCDSS that notifies health care professionals if a life-threatening medical condition is detected. We developed and implemented AMPEL at a university hospital and regional hospitals in Germany (University of Leipzig Medical Center and the Muldental Clinics in Grimma and Wurzen). It currently runs 5 different algorithms in parallel: hypokalemia, hypercalcemia, hyponatremia, hyperlactatemia, and acute kidney injury. ConclusionsAMPEL enables continuous surveillance of patients. The system is constantly being evaluated and extended and has the capacity for many more algorithms. We hope to encourage colleagues from other institutions to design and implement similar CDSS using the theory, specifications, and experiences described in this work.