Kidney Diseases (Jan 2023)

Clinical characteristics and management of patients with secondary hyperparathyroidism undergoing hemodialysis: a feasibility analysis of electronic health records using Natural Language Processing

  • Alberto Ortiz,
  • Jose Portoles,
  • Maria Dolores Pino-Pino,
  • Jesús Barea,
  • María López,
  • Patricia de Sequera,
  • Borja Quiroga,
  • Rocio Echarri,
  • Mario Prieto Velasco,
  • Rafael Díaz,
  • Gonzalo Gómez Marqués,
  • Pilar Sanchez Perez,
  • Vicens Torregrosa,
  • Mariano Rodriguez

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1159/000528784

Abstract

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Introduction: This study aimed to assess the feasibility of applying Natural Language Processing (NLP) to analyze real-world data (RWD) and resolve clinical problems in patients with secondary hyperparathyroidism and chronic kidney disease undergoing hemodialysis (SHPT/CKD-HD). The primary objective was to evaluate how well the guidelines-recommended analytical goals are achieved in a Spanish cohort of SHPT/CKD-HD patients based on RWD. Methods: Unstructured data in the EHRs from 8 hospitals were retrospectively analyzed using the EHRead® technology, based on NLP and machine learning. Variables extracted from EHRs included demographics, CKD-related clinical characteristics, comorbidities, and complications, mineral and bone disorder parameters levels and treatments at baseline, 6 months and 12 months follow up. Results: A total of 623 prevalent SHPT/CKD-HD patients were identified; of those, 282 fulfilled the inclusion criteria. They were predominantly elderly males with cardiovascular comorbidities and first cause of CKD was diabetic nephropathy. Diagnosis of SHPT was associated with an improvement in median values for parathyroid hormone (PTH), calcium and phosphate. However, the percentage of patients with normal PTH ranges remained stable during the study period (52.8% to 60.4%) while the percentage of patients with within-target range serum calcium or phosphate values showed an increasing trend (43.2% to 60% and 38.8% to 50%). At baseline, 74.1% of patients were using SHPT-related medication, including at least one Vitamin D or analogue (63.1%), phosphate binders (46.8%), and/or calcimimetics (9.6%). Conclusions: This study represents the first attempt to use clinical NLP to analyze SHPT/CKD-HD patients based on unstructured clinical data. This methodology is useful to address clinical problems based on RWD and identified a high rate of out-of-range mineral-bone analytical values in patients with HPT/CKD-HD and an increasing trend of out-of-range values for serum calcium and phosphate.