MENDS-on-FHIR: leveraging the OMOP common data model and FHIR standards for national chronic disease surveillance
Objectives The Multi-State EHR-Based Network for Disease Surveillance (MENDS) is a population-based chronic disease surveillance distributed data network that uses institution-specific extraction-transformation-load (ETL) routines. MENDS-on-FHIR examined using Health Language Seven’s Fast Healthcare...
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Veröffentlicht in: | JAMIA open 2024-07, Vol.7 (2), p.ooae045 |
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Sprache: | eng |
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Zusammenfassung: | Objectives
The Multi-State EHR-Based Network for Disease Surveillance (MENDS) is a population-based chronic disease surveillance distributed data network that uses institution-specific extraction-transformation-load (ETL) routines. MENDS-on-FHIR examined using Health Language Seven’s Fast Healthcare Interoperability Resources (HL7® FHIR®) and US Core Implementation Guide (US Core IG) compliant resources derived from the Observational Medical Outcomes Partnership (OMOP) Common Data Model (CDM) to create a standards-based ETL pipeline.
Materials and Methods
The input data source was a research data warehouse containing clinical and administrative data in OMOP CDM Version 5.3 format. OMOP-to-FHIR transformations, using a unique JavaScript Object Notation (JSON)-to-JSON transformation language called Whistle, created FHIR R4 V4.0.1/US Core IG V4.0.0 conformant resources that were stored in a local FHIR server. A REST-based Bulk FHIR $export request extracted FHIR resources to populate a local MENDS database.
Results
Eleven OMOP tables were used to create 10 FHIR/US Core compliant resource types. A total of 1.13 trillion resources were extracted and inserted into the MENDS repository. A very low rate of non-compliant resources was observed.
Discussion
OMOP-to-FHIR transformation results passed validation with less than a 1% non-compliance rate. These standards-compliant FHIR resources provided standardized data elements required by the MENDS surveillance use case. The Bulk FHIR application programming interface (API) enabled population-level data exchange using interoperable FHIR resources. The OMOP-to-FHIR transformation pipeline creates a FHIR interface for accessing OMOP data.
Conclusion
MENDS-on-FHIR successfully replaced custom ETL with standards-based interoperable FHIR resources using Bulk FHIR. The OMOP-to-FHIR transformations provide an alternative mechanism for sharing OMOP data.
Lay Summary
Many chronic conditions such as hypertension, obesity, and diabetes are becoming more prevalent, especially in high-risk individuals, such as minorities and low-income patients. Public health surveillance networks measure the presence of specific conditions repeatedly over time, seeking to detect changes in the amount of a disease conditions so that public health officials can implement new early prevention programs or evaluate the impact of an existing prevention program. Data stored in electronic health records (EHRs) could be used to measure the presence of hea |
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ISSN: | 2574-2531 2574-2531 |
DOI: | 10.1093/jamiaopen/ooae045 |