Title: HealtheChild
1Health-e-Child
Peter Bloodsworth CCCS Research Centre UWE,
Bristol, UK peter.bloodsworth_at_cern.ch
HP Labs Presentation 23th November 2007
2Talk Structure
- The Health-e-Child Project.
- The Semantic Web in Health-e-Child.
- Past Research and Future Projects.
- NeuGrid.
- Conclusion.
HP Labs Presentation 23th November 2007
3Facts and Figures
- Coordinator Siemens AG
- Partner 14 European companies, hospitals,
institutions - Timetable 01-Jan-06 to 31-Dec-09 (4 years)?
- Web page http//www.Health-e-Child.org
- Instrument Integrated Project (IP) of the
- Framework Program FP6
- Project Identifier IST-2004-027749
HP Labs Presentation 23th November 2007
4Clinical Aspects Focus on Paediatrics
- Diseases
- Heart diseases (Right Ventricle Overload,
Cardiomyopathy.)? - Inflammatory diseases (Juvenile Idiopathic
Arthritis.)? - Brain tumours (Gliomas.)?
- Clinical Institutions
- I.R.C.C.S. Giannina Gaslini, Genoa, Italy.
- University College London, Great Ormond Street
ChildrensHospital, London, UK. - Assistance Publique Hopitaux de Paris Necker,
Paris, France.
HP Labs Presentation 23th November 2007
5The Health-e-Child Consortium
- Siemens AG, Germany
- Lynkeus SRL, Rome, Italy
- Giannina Gaslini Hospital, Genoa, Italy (IGG)?
- Great Ormond Street Childrens Hospital, UK
- Assistance Publique Hopitaux de Paris Necker,
Paris, France (APHP)? - European Organisation for Nuclear Research
(CERN), Geneva, Switzerland - Maat G Knowledge, Toledo, Spain
- University of the West of England, Bristol, UK
- University of Athens, Athens, Greece (UoA)?
- Universita' degli Studi di Genova (DISI),
Genoa, Italy - National Institute for Information and
Automation Research (INRIA), Sophia - Antipolis, France
- European Genetics Foundation (EGF), Bologna,
Italy - Aktsiaselts ASPER BIOTECH, Tartu, Estonia
- Gerolamo Gaslini Foundation, Genoa, Italy (FGG)?
HP Labs Presentation 23th November 2007
6Juvenile Idiopathic Arthritis
- Juvenile idiopathic arthritis is a subset of
arthritis seen in childhood. - May be transient and self-limited or chronic.
- It differs significantly from arthritis commonly
seen in adults (osteoarthritis, rheumatoid
arthritis.)? - JIA is a fairly rare disease lt 1 in 1000 children
suffer from it. - It is difficult to diagnose because of the range
of symptoms. - Swelling may be difficult to detect clinically.
- Young children may have difficulty in
communicating pain.
Source Wikipedia
HP Labs Presentation 23th November 2007
7Project Aims
- To gain a holistic view of a childs health by
integrating traditional and emerging sources of
biomedical information from genetic to clinical
to epidemiological across institutions
(horizontal, vertical, and longitudinal
integration.)? - Develop a biomedical information platform,
supported by sophisticated and robust search,
optimisation, and matching techniques for
heterogeneous information, empowered by the Grid. - Build enabling tools and services that will
improve the quality of care and reduce its cost
by increasing efficiency.
HP Labs Presentation 23th November 2007
8Health-e-Child
HP Labs Presentation 23th November 2007
9Project Outcomes
- Outcomes of Health-e-Child include
-
- The construction of Integrated disease models
exploiting all available information levels. - Database-guided biomedical decision support
systems. - ? Large-scale, cross modality information fusion
and data mining for knowledge discovery. - The use of Semantic Web technologies such as
ontologies to capture domain knowledge and assist
in providing services to clinicians.
HP Labs Presentation 23th November 2007
10The Role of the Semantic Web in Health-e-Child
- Health-e-Child is a data integration project.
- The Semantic Web is used in many parts of the
platform - To power vertical data integration.
- Providing domain knowledge to decision support
systems. - Assisting users during querying and interaction
with the platform. - Re-use of existing medical domain knowledge by
the extraction and linkage of ontological
fragments. - To help us manage the heterogeneity and general
complexity of medical records. - Standardisation of medical terminology.
HP Labs Presentation 23th November 2007
11Case Study Assisting Users During Query
Formulation
- Example Dr Jones wants to study patients who
are suspected of having a certain Brain Disease,
show all patients who are likely to have Brain
Tumour Disease-X. - SQL for this query might be SELECT FROM
PATIENT_INFORMATION WHERE PATIENT_ID IN (SELECT
DISTINCT PATIENT_ID FROM PATIENT_INFORMATION X
WHERE NOT EXISTS (SELECT FROM (SELECT CT.NAME
CLINICAL_TEST_NAME,CTV.CT_VALUE
CLINICAL_TEST_VALUE FROM CLINICAL_TEST CT JOIN
CLINICAL_TEST_VALUES CTV ON CT.IDCTV.CT_ID WHERE
(CT.NAME 'DOUBLE_VISION' AND CTV.CT_VALUE
'TRUE') OR (CT.NAME 'HEADACHES' AND
CTV.CT_VALUE 'TRUE') OR (CT.NAME
'ORTHOPEDIC_SEQUELEA' AND CTV.CT_VALUE
'SEVERE_SYMPTOMATIC')) S WHERE NOT EXISTS (SELECT
FROM PATIENT_INFORMATION Z WHERE
(Z.PATIENT_IDX.PATIENT_ID) AND
(Z.CLINICAL_TEST_NAMES.CLINICAL_TEST_NAME)
AND(Z.CLINICAL_TEST_VALUE S.CLINICAL_TEST_VALUE
)))) - This is a basic example things can get far more
complicated!!
HP Labs Presentation 23th November 2007
12The Problem of Querying
- Clinicians role is to save lives and not spend
their time learning SQL! - There is a range of types of queries that users
want to run generally these are fairly complex. - Complexity is increased by security concerns,
data is held at individual hospitals and
therefore we need to overlay semantic description
on the existing data. - Domain information is often required to enrich
queries for example If a clinician requests a
particular organ it might be useful to search for
both the organ and related tissues. - But domain information is complex itself so how
do we use it?
HP Labs Presentation 23th November 2007
13Can Ontological Description Help Clinicians Out?
- We can describe user queries in our ontology
showing what data is required to produce an
answer. - The underlying data structure and data model and
mapping with query groups can also be expressed
in the ontology. - Fragments of medical ontologies can be added to
provide domain specific knowledge. - A query formulation engine could use all this
information to generate SQL that can be run
against distributed databases and the results
integrated to build an answer set. - Another benefit of this approach is that the
knowledge can also be used to help clinicians
interact with the system.
HP Labs Presentation 23th November 2007
14An Ontology-based Query Formulation System
HP Labs Presentation 23th November 2007
15An Ontology Fragment
HP Labs Presentation 23th November 2007
16Capturing DB metadata in an Ontology
HP Labs Presentation 23th November 2007
17Future Work
- To fully populate the query formulation
algorithms. - Exploring further uses of ontologies to assist
users. - The integration of reasoners within the query
formulation process. - Finding ways for clinicians to extend the system
by adding new concepts into our ontology.
HP Labs Presentation 23th November 2007
18Past Projects and the Future
HP Labs Presentation 23th November 2007
19The neuGrid Consortium
HP Labs Presentation 23th November 2007
20Project Objectives
- To build a new user-friendly Grid-based research
e-Infrastructure. - Collection/archiving of large amounts of imaging
data. - Paired with computationally intensive data
analyses. - To enable EU neuroscientists to carry out
cutting-edge research. - Imaging of degenerative brain diseases.
- Google for Brain Imaging.
HP Labs Presentation 23th November 2007
21Question Time !!
None like this please!!
HP Labs Presentation 23th November 2007