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Use of Natural Language Processing to Infer Sites of Metastatic Disease From Radiology Reports at Scale.

Authors :
Tay, See Boon
Low, Guat Hwa
Wong, Gillian Jing En
Tey, Han Jieh
Leong, Fun Loon
Li, Constance
Chua, Melvin Lee Kiang
Tan, Daniel Shao Weng
Thng, Choon Hua
Tan, Iain Bee Huat
Tan, Ryan Shea Ying Cong
Source :
JCO Clinical Cancer Informatics. 5/24/2024, Vol. 8, p1-10. 10p.
Publication Year :
2024

Abstract

PURPOSE: To evaluate natural language processing (NLP) methods to infer metastatic sites from radiology reports. METHODS: A set of 4,522 computed tomography (CT) reports of 550 patients with 14 types of cancer was used to fine-tune four clinical large language models (LLMs) for multilabel classification of metastatic sites. We also developed an NLP information extraction (IE) system (on the basis of named entity recognition, assertion status detection, and relation extraction) for comparison. Model performances were measured by F1 scores on test and three external validation sets. The best model was used to facilitate analysis of metastatic frequencies in a cohort study of 6,555 patients with 53,838 CT reports. RESULTS: The RadBERT, BioBERT, GatorTron-base, and GatorTron-medium LLMs achieved F1 scores of 0.84, 0.87, 0.89, and 0.91, respectively, on the test set. The IE system performed best, achieving an F1 score of 0.93. F1 scores of the IE system by individual cancer type ranged from 0.89 to 0.96. The IE system attained F1 scores of 0.89, 0.83, and 0.81, respectively, on external validation sets including additional cancer types, positron emission tomography-CT ,and magnetic resonance imaging scans, respectively. In our cohort study, we found that for colorectal cancer, liver-only metastases were higher in de novo stage IV versus recurrent patients (29.7% v 12.2%; P <.001). Conversely, lung-only metastases were more frequent in recurrent versus de novo stage IV patients (17.2% v 7.3%; P <.001). CONCLUSION: We developed an IE system that accurately infers metastatic sites in multiple primary cancers from radiology reports. It has explainable methods and performs better than some clinical LLMs. The inferred metastatic phenotypes could enhance cancer research databases and clinical trial matching, and identify potential patients for oligometastatic interventions. Ever thought of using NLP to extract sites of metastases from radiology reports? Read this paper. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
24734276
Volume :
8
Database :
Academic Search Index
Journal :
JCO Clinical Cancer Informatics
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
177458551
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1200/CCI.23.00122