A Symptom-Based Natural Language Processing Surveillance Pipeline for Post-COVID-19 Patients

Greg M. Silverman, Geetanjali Rajamani, Nicholas E. Ingraham, James K. Glover, Himanshu S. Sahoo, Michael G Usher, Rui Zhang, Farha Ikramuddin, Tanya E. Melnik, Genevieve B. Melton, Christopher J. Tignanelli

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

Abstract

Post-acute sequelae of SARS CoV-2 (PASC) are a group of conditions in which patients previously infected with COVID-19 experience symptoms weeks/months post-infection. PASC has substantial societal burden, including increased healthcare costs and disabilities. This study presents a natural language processing (NLP) based pipeline for identification of PASC symptoms and demonstrates its ability to estimate the proportion of suspected PASC cases. A manual case review to obtain this estimate indicated our sample incidence of PASC (13%) was representative of the estimated population proportion (95% CI: 19±6.22%). However, the high number of cases classified as indeterminate demonstrates the challenges in classifying PASC even among experienced clinicians. Lastly, this study developed a dashboard to display views of aggregated PASC symptoms and measured its utility using the System Usability Scale. Overall comments related to the dashboard's potential were positive. This pipeline is crucial for monitoring post-COVID-19 patients with potential for use in clinical settings.

Original languageEnglish (US)
Pages (from-to)860-864
Number of pages5
JournalStudies in health technology and informatics
Volume310
DOIs
StatePublished - Jan 25 2024

Keywords

  • disease surveillance
  • NLP
  • PASC

PubMed: MeSH publication types

  • Journal Article

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