Physician assessment of disease activity in JIA subtypes. Analysis of data extracted from electronic medical records

<p>Abstract</p> <p>Objective</p> <p>Although electronic medical records (EMRs) have facilitated care for children with juvenile idiopathic arthritis (JIA), analyses of treatment outcomes have required paper based or manually re-entered data. We have started EMR discrete...

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Main Authors: Wang Deli, Ruprecht Jason, Miller Michael L, Zhou Ying, Lales George, McKenna Sean, Klein-Gitelman Marisa
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: BMC 2011-04-01
Series:Pediatric Rheumatology Online Journal
Online Access:http://www.ped-rheum.com/content/9/1/9
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spelling doaj-661b6cb282f34f3d9e7064bacba5ef392020-11-24T23:30:59ZengBMCPediatric Rheumatology Online Journal1546-00962011-04-0191910.1186/1546-0096-9-9Physician assessment of disease activity in JIA subtypes. Analysis of data extracted from electronic medical recordsWang DeliRuprecht JasonMiller Michael LZhou YingLales GeorgeMcKenna SeanKlein-Gitelman Marisa<p>Abstract</p> <p>Objective</p> <p>Although electronic medical records (EMRs) have facilitated care for children with juvenile idiopathic arthritis (JIA), analyses of treatment outcomes have required paper based or manually re-entered data. We have started EMR discrete data entry for JIA patient visits, including joint examination and global assessment, by physician and patient. In this preliminary study, we extracted data from the EMR to Xenobase™ (TransMed Systems, Inc., Cupertino, CA), an application permitting cohort analyses of the relationship between global assessment to joint examination and subtype.</p> <p>Methods</p> <p>During clinic visits, data were entered into discrete fields in ambulatory visit forms in the EMR (EpicCare™, Epic Systems, Verona, WI). Data were extracted using Clarity Reports, then de-identified and uploaded for analyses to Xenobase™. Parameters included joint examination, ILAR diagnostic classification, physician global assessment, patient global assessment, and patient pain score. Data for a single visit for each of 160 patients over a 2 month period, beginning March, 2010, were analyzed.</p> <p>Results</p> <p>In systemic JIA patients, strong correlations for physician global assessment were found with pain score, joint count and patient assessment. In contrast, physician assessment for patients with persistent oligoarticular and rheumatoid factor negative patients showed strong correlation with joint counts, but only moderate correlation with pain scores and patient global assessment. Conversely, for enthesitis patients, physician assessment correlated strongly with pain scores, and moderately with joint count and patient global assessment. Rheumatoid factor positive patients, the smallest group studied, showed moderate correlation for all three measures. Patient global assessment for systemic patients showed strong correlations with pain scores and joint count, similar to data for physician assessment. For polyarticular and enthesitis patients, correlation of patient global assessment with pain scores was strong. Moderate correlations were found between patient global assessment and joint count in oligoarticular and polyarticular patients.</p> <p>Conclusion</p> <p>Data extraction from the EMR is feasible and useful to evaluate JIA patients for indicators of treatment responsiveness. In this pilot study, we found correlates for physician global assessment of arthritis differed, according to disease subtype. Further data extraction and analyses will determine if these findings can be confirmed, and will assess other outcome measures, compare longitudinal responses to treatment, and export extracted data to multi-center databases.</p> http://www.ped-rheum.com/content/9/1/9
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Wang Deli
Ruprecht Jason
Miller Michael L
Zhou Ying
Lales George
McKenna Sean
Klein-Gitelman Marisa
spellingShingle Wang Deli
Ruprecht Jason
Miller Michael L
Zhou Ying
Lales George
McKenna Sean
Klein-Gitelman Marisa
Physician assessment of disease activity in JIA subtypes. Analysis of data extracted from electronic medical records
Pediatric Rheumatology Online Journal
author_facet Wang Deli
Ruprecht Jason
Miller Michael L
Zhou Ying
Lales George
McKenna Sean
Klein-Gitelman Marisa
author_sort Wang Deli
title Physician assessment of disease activity in JIA subtypes. Analysis of data extracted from electronic medical records
title_short Physician assessment of disease activity in JIA subtypes. Analysis of data extracted from electronic medical records
title_full Physician assessment of disease activity in JIA subtypes. Analysis of data extracted from electronic medical records
title_fullStr Physician assessment of disease activity in JIA subtypes. Analysis of data extracted from electronic medical records
title_full_unstemmed Physician assessment of disease activity in JIA subtypes. Analysis of data extracted from electronic medical records
title_sort physician assessment of disease activity in jia subtypes. analysis of data extracted from electronic medical records
publisher BMC
series Pediatric Rheumatology Online Journal
issn 1546-0096
publishDate 2011-04-01
description <p>Abstract</p> <p>Objective</p> <p>Although electronic medical records (EMRs) have facilitated care for children with juvenile idiopathic arthritis (JIA), analyses of treatment outcomes have required paper based or manually re-entered data. We have started EMR discrete data entry for JIA patient visits, including joint examination and global assessment, by physician and patient. In this preliminary study, we extracted data from the EMR to Xenobase™ (TransMed Systems, Inc., Cupertino, CA), an application permitting cohort analyses of the relationship between global assessment to joint examination and subtype.</p> <p>Methods</p> <p>During clinic visits, data were entered into discrete fields in ambulatory visit forms in the EMR (EpicCare™, Epic Systems, Verona, WI). Data were extracted using Clarity Reports, then de-identified and uploaded for analyses to Xenobase™. Parameters included joint examination, ILAR diagnostic classification, physician global assessment, patient global assessment, and patient pain score. Data for a single visit for each of 160 patients over a 2 month period, beginning March, 2010, were analyzed.</p> <p>Results</p> <p>In systemic JIA patients, strong correlations for physician global assessment were found with pain score, joint count and patient assessment. In contrast, physician assessment for patients with persistent oligoarticular and rheumatoid factor negative patients showed strong correlation with joint counts, but only moderate correlation with pain scores and patient global assessment. Conversely, for enthesitis patients, physician assessment correlated strongly with pain scores, and moderately with joint count and patient global assessment. Rheumatoid factor positive patients, the smallest group studied, showed moderate correlation for all three measures. Patient global assessment for systemic patients showed strong correlations with pain scores and joint count, similar to data for physician assessment. For polyarticular and enthesitis patients, correlation of patient global assessment with pain scores was strong. Moderate correlations were found between patient global assessment and joint count in oligoarticular and polyarticular patients.</p> <p>Conclusion</p> <p>Data extraction from the EMR is feasible and useful to evaluate JIA patients for indicators of treatment responsiveness. In this pilot study, we found correlates for physician global assessment of arthritis differed, according to disease subtype. Further data extraction and analyses will determine if these findings can be confirmed, and will assess other outcome measures, compare longitudinal responses to treatment, and export extracted data to multi-center databases.</p>
url http://www.ped-rheum.com/content/9/1/9
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