Cargando…

Automated HL7v2 LRI informatics framework for streamlining genomics-EHR data integration

While VCF formatted files are the lingua franca of next-generation sequencing, most EHRs do not provide native VCF support. As a result, labs often must send non-structured PDF reports to the EHR. On the other hand, while FHIR adoption is growing, most EHRs support HL7 interoperability standards, pa...

Descripción completa

Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Dolin, Robert H., Gupta, Rohan, Newsom, Kimberly, Heale, Bret S.E., Gothi, Shailesh, Starostik, Petr, Chamala, Srikar
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Elsevier 2023
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10504540/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/37719179
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.jpi.2023.100330
_version_ 1785106747308900352
author Dolin, Robert H.
Gupta, Rohan
Newsom, Kimberly
Heale, Bret S.E.
Gothi, Shailesh
Starostik, Petr
Chamala, Srikar
author_facet Dolin, Robert H.
Gupta, Rohan
Newsom, Kimberly
Heale, Bret S.E.
Gothi, Shailesh
Starostik, Petr
Chamala, Srikar
author_sort Dolin, Robert H.
collection PubMed
description While VCF formatted files are the lingua franca of next-generation sequencing, most EHRs do not provide native VCF support. As a result, labs often must send non-structured PDF reports to the EHR. On the other hand, while FHIR adoption is growing, most EHRs support HL7 interoperability standards, particularly those based on the HL7 Version 2 (HL7v2) standard. The HL7 Version 2 genomics component of the HL7 Laboratory Results Interface (HL7v2 LRI) standard specifies a formalism for the structured communication of genomic data from lab to EHR. We previously described an open-source tool (vcf2fhir) that converts VCF files into HL7 FHIR format. In this report, we describe how the utility has been extended to output HL7v2 LRI data that contains both variants and variant annotations (e.g., predicted phenotypes and therapeutic implications). Using this HL7v2 converter, we implemented an automated pipeline for moving structured genomic data from the clinical laboratory to EHR. We developed an open source hl7v2GenomicsExtractor that converts genomic interpretation report files into a series of HL7v2 observations conformant to HL7v2 LRI. We further enhanced the converter to produce output conformant to Epic's genomic import specification and to support alternative input formats. An automated pipeline for pushing standards-based structured genomic data directly into the EHR was successfully implemented, where genetic variant data and the clinical annotations are now both available to be viewed in the EHR through Epic's genomics module. Issues encountered in the development and deployment of the HL7v2 converter primarily revolved around data variability issues, primarily lack of a standardized representation of data elements within various genomic interpretation report files. The technical implementation of a HL7v2 message transformation to feed genomic variant and clinical annotation data into an EHR has been successful. In addition to genetic variant data, the implementation described here releases the valuable asset of clinically relevant genomic annotations provided by labs from static PDFs to calculable, structured data in EHR systems.
format Online
Article
Text
id pubmed-10504540
institution National Center for Biotechnology Information
language English
publishDate 2023
publisher Elsevier
record_format MEDLINE/PubMed
spelling pubmed-105045402023-09-17 Automated HL7v2 LRI informatics framework for streamlining genomics-EHR data integration Dolin, Robert H. Gupta, Rohan Newsom, Kimberly Heale, Bret S.E. Gothi, Shailesh Starostik, Petr Chamala, Srikar J Pathol Inform Short Communication While VCF formatted files are the lingua franca of next-generation sequencing, most EHRs do not provide native VCF support. As a result, labs often must send non-structured PDF reports to the EHR. On the other hand, while FHIR adoption is growing, most EHRs support HL7 interoperability standards, particularly those based on the HL7 Version 2 (HL7v2) standard. The HL7 Version 2 genomics component of the HL7 Laboratory Results Interface (HL7v2 LRI) standard specifies a formalism for the structured communication of genomic data from lab to EHR. We previously described an open-source tool (vcf2fhir) that converts VCF files into HL7 FHIR format. In this report, we describe how the utility has been extended to output HL7v2 LRI data that contains both variants and variant annotations (e.g., predicted phenotypes and therapeutic implications). Using this HL7v2 converter, we implemented an automated pipeline for moving structured genomic data from the clinical laboratory to EHR. We developed an open source hl7v2GenomicsExtractor that converts genomic interpretation report files into a series of HL7v2 observations conformant to HL7v2 LRI. We further enhanced the converter to produce output conformant to Epic's genomic import specification and to support alternative input formats. An automated pipeline for pushing standards-based structured genomic data directly into the EHR was successfully implemented, where genetic variant data and the clinical annotations are now both available to be viewed in the EHR through Epic's genomics module. Issues encountered in the development and deployment of the HL7v2 converter primarily revolved around data variability issues, primarily lack of a standardized representation of data elements within various genomic interpretation report files. The technical implementation of a HL7v2 message transformation to feed genomic variant and clinical annotation data into an EHR has been successful. In addition to genetic variant data, the implementation described here releases the valuable asset of clinically relevant genomic annotations provided by labs from static PDFs to calculable, structured data in EHR systems. Elsevier 2023-08-15 /pmc/articles/PMC10504540/ /pubmed/37719179 http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.jpi.2023.100330 Text en © 2023 The Authors https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/This is an open access article under the CC BY-NC-ND license (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/).
spellingShingle Short Communication
Dolin, Robert H.
Gupta, Rohan
Newsom, Kimberly
Heale, Bret S.E.
Gothi, Shailesh
Starostik, Petr
Chamala, Srikar
Automated HL7v2 LRI informatics framework for streamlining genomics-EHR data integration
title Automated HL7v2 LRI informatics framework for streamlining genomics-EHR data integration
title_full Automated HL7v2 LRI informatics framework for streamlining genomics-EHR data integration
title_fullStr Automated HL7v2 LRI informatics framework for streamlining genomics-EHR data integration
title_full_unstemmed Automated HL7v2 LRI informatics framework for streamlining genomics-EHR data integration
title_short Automated HL7v2 LRI informatics framework for streamlining genomics-EHR data integration
title_sort automated hl7v2 lri informatics framework for streamlining genomics-ehr data integration
topic Short Communication
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10504540/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/37719179
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.jpi.2023.100330
work_keys_str_mv AT dolinroberth automatedhl7v2lriinformaticsframeworkforstreamlininggenomicsehrdataintegration
AT guptarohan automatedhl7v2lriinformaticsframeworkforstreamlininggenomicsehrdataintegration
AT newsomkimberly automatedhl7v2lriinformaticsframeworkforstreamlininggenomicsehrdataintegration
AT healebretse automatedhl7v2lriinformaticsframeworkforstreamlininggenomicsehrdataintegration
AT gothishailesh automatedhl7v2lriinformaticsframeworkforstreamlininggenomicsehrdataintegration
AT starostikpetr automatedhl7v2lriinformaticsframeworkforstreamlininggenomicsehrdataintegration
AT chamalasrikar automatedhl7v2lriinformaticsframeworkforstreamlininggenomicsehrdataintegration