Title: Pathology Informatics and the Future of Medicine
1Pathology Informaticsand the Future of Medicine
- Practical Informatics Course
- APIII 2007
2What is Pathology Informatics?
- The term has been defined largely by its usage,
and its meaning is evolving (expanding) - For many, informatics the use of computers (or
any and all technology) in the practice of a
discipline - Shifts focus to the tools themselves rather than
how the tools are used - e.g., laboratory medicine is not simply the use
of instruments to analyze blood - e.g., molecular biology is not the use of
bacteria in biology - Dilutes the intent of defining an academic
discipline
3Informatics vs Computer Science ?
- Computer Science, among many other things,
addresses how data is stored and organized in a
computer. - For the most part, however, computer scientists
focus on the storage of the data itself, often
without consideration for what the data
represents in terms of real-life concepts - Knowledge of the real-life concepts represented
by the data, including the inherent and implicit
relationships these concepts impose, is critical
to proper management of that information. This
domain layer is an important part of what
separates informatics from computer science
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6Informatics
- The study of how data is acquired, stored,
processed, retrieved, analyzed, and presented, in
such a way as to turn data into information - Computer is not part of the definition
discipline could have existed a century ago - Information explosion, plus demands to make
greater use of that information - Manual management becomes inefficient and
impractical - Computer becomes an indispensable tool for the
discipline of informatics
7Informatics is a Process
8Overlapping Scope of Informatics
9Pathology Informatics
- The use of electronic information systems to
facilitate, promote, and advance the practice of
pathology - Practice of pathology patient care, physician
education, understanding disease - Technology in and of itself does not count - it
must convey information - However, understanding the tools (computers,
cameras, microscopes) is certainly an important
part of the successful use of informatics
10The Role of the Pathologist in Patient Care
- Pathologists do not simply attach names to pieces
of tissue or report numbers measured by a
machine we provide an assessment which directs
the clinical care of the patient - The final interpretation is based not solely
upon the tissue and/or the results of analysis,
but rather is tempered by the clinical setting - We choose the wording of our interpretive reports
to trigger the appropriate clinical response - Tools
- The histologic image is one of the richest data
streams in medicine, and the ability of the
pathologist to synthesize and interpret this
information is unlikely to be duplicated
electronically for some time - Other techniques immunohistochemistry, flow
cytometry, gene rearrangement studies, molecular
tests
11PathologyToday
Electronic Data Layer
- Information systems used predominantly to manage
practices and workflow - Limited use to access external data sources
- No direct feedback from patient outcome
Dx
Rx
12Forces Reshaping the Practice of Medicine
- Information Availability
- Massive availability and exchange of data
on-line - Increased expectation for all physicians to be
up-to-date - Outcomes-based treatment decisions
- Consumerism
- Information access (hidden medical knowledge
revealed) - Personal control of care
- Expectations for Consistency, Quality, and Value
- New, Complex Data Streams
- Human Genome
- Genetics
- Molecular Markers
- Diagnostic
- Prognostic
- Gene Expression Arrays
- Proteomics
- Pharmacogenomics
13Controlling the Flow of Information
- Vast amounts of data need to be assimilated,
filtered, and presented in such a way as to
convert it into usable information - Informatics tools will be needed to assist in the
data integration process - The decision making role in medicine will go to
whoever can most effectively mobilize,
capitalize, and leverage the informatics
resources necessary to make this a reality - Two views of the future
14Pathologist as Data Provider
Electronic Data Layer
- Pathologist limits evaluation to tissue or fluids
submitted - Pathology output is a data element in treating
clinicians decision support system - As treating clinicians draw on other data
sources, relative contribution of pathologist
decreases
Electronic Data Layer
Decision Support
Dx Rx
15Pathologist as Diagnostic Specialist
Electronic Data Layer
- Pathology moves aggressively to develop and adopt
informatics tools to leverage data from emerging
technologies - Pathologist remains a diagnostic consultant,
providing outcomes based treatment
recommendations to treating clinicians
Decision Support
Dx
Rx
16Choosing our Future
- Pathologist as a Data Provider
- Easier steady-as-she-goes result
- Pathology is protected from the new diagnostic
modalities - As new diagnostic modalities proliferate, the
relative contribution of the pathology decreases - Pathologist as the Diagnostic Specialist
- Pathologists, largely freed from the details of
day-to-day patient care issues, are better
positioned to fulfill the role of data
integration - Hospital based pathology departments have
traditionally enjoyed better access to hospital
capital budget funds than direct patient care
disciplines - More in keeping with the current roles of the
respective players - More in line with the interests and personalities
for which the two disciplines have traditionally
selected - Pathologists and pathology departments must move
aggressively to develop the skills and the
informatics infrastructure necessary to leverage
the information explosion
17Building our Future
- Create informatics programs in pathology and/or
laboratory medicine departments - Get involved in Electronic Medical Record
decisions at your institution - New information systems structured for outcomes
research - Pathology Informatics and biomedical research
- Basic informatics research
18What is the Future of Pathology Informatics?
- Probably NOT in NEW technology
- We already have more technology than we know what
to do with - Some exceptions (speech recognition, virtual
microscope slides, etc.) - These are simply different ways of doing what we
already do - Management of existing technology
- Requires an understanding of capabilities and
limitations of the technology - Requires a thorough understanding of the
day-to-day practice of pathology and the barriers
to adopting new practices - Requires a vision of what the role of the
pathologist will be in 10-20 years - Should be a need-driven process
- Should arise within, or at least be integrally
associated with, pathology / laboratory medicine
departments - Hospital / Institutional IT groups have different
goals / priorities which may overlap, but often
will not (different geographic coverage areas)
19Role of the Pathologist in Managing and Using
Clinical Information Systems
- Whatever information system management structure
exists at your future institutions, pathologists
will have some role in decision making - Selection of information system
- Selection of features to implement
- Integration of system into departmental workflow
- Management of information system
- Development/deployment of add-on technology
20Developing a Pathology Informatics Program
- Goal
- Scope
- Main clinical system(s), desktop support,
infrastructure, R D - Philosophy
- New Technology vs Application of existing
technology - In-house development vs off-the-shelf
- Identify Resources
- People, capital investments, on-going support
costs - Relationship to Institutional IT Programs
- Role of Pathologist(s)
21Pathology Informatics Philosophies
Development of New Technology (Basic Informatics)
Application of Existing Technology (Translational
Informatics)
- Goal Proof-of-Concept
- Fits traditional research model
- Externally Fundable
- Publishable
- Promotable
- Cutting-Edge work is expensive (5-20x)
- Brings money into institution
- Pathologist is a consultant
- Goal Usable solution
- Clashes with traditional model
- Generally internally funded
- May be institution specific - soft publications
- Not viewed as scholarly
- Costs are more predictable
- In short term, costs institution money
- Pathologist should set direction
22Scope of Pathology Informatics Programs
23Pathology and Computerized Patient Records
- Electronic Medical Records are coming
- Natural extension of spread of information
management through healthcare - Why should pathology be integral to the selection
and deployment of these systems? - Pathology is the largest volume data generator
for input into EMRs - Longest history with longitudinal electronic
patient records - Pathologists must maintain stewardship for their
data in EMRs - Accuracy
- Display formats - the appearance of the data in
the EMR is replacing the printed report as the
primary product of the pathology laboratory
24New Systems for Outcomes Research
- Importance of outcome information
- Pathology is the study of disease, not just the
histology/chemistry of disease - Patient outcome is a crucial part of
understanding the disease - Current anatomic and clinical pathology
information systems are not ideal for outcomes
research - Current systems are specimen based rather than
patient based - Interpretive data stored as free text discrete
data elements often not readily available - Tumor size, LN status
- Hospital Tumor Registries
- Starting point - model for the type of
information systems needed - Manual curation of data
- Pathology departments should be more actively
associated - More accurate abstracting of data
- Multi-institutional systems
25Enabling Biomedical Research
- The data stored within pathology information
systems is incredibly valuable for clinical
research - When combined with archived human tissue, becomes
the single most valuable commodity for basic
biomedical research - Issues
- Tissue ownership
- Potential future diagnostic value of tissue -
what is excess - Reclaiming results from research studies to use
in decision support - Embrace new diagnostic tests as they become
available - Pathology has the experience necessary to
critically evaluate the true diagnostic/prognostic
value of these tests
26Basic Informatics Research
- Information extraction from text
- Natural language processing
- Mobilize data stored in pathology archives, as
well as discharge summaries and operative notes - Issues negation, synonyms, term evolution
- Information extraction from images
- Humans are incredibly good at pattern recognition
- Human eye is bad at absolute density assessment -
quantitation - Electronic cytotechnologists
- Computer assisted diagnosis
- Potential role for whole slide imaging
27Absolute Intensity Assessment
28Data Display / Presentation Tools
- New diagnostic tests are highly parallel,
producing as output hundreds to thousands of data
points - People, in general, are not very skilled at
assimilating long tables of numbers and drawing
inferences and/or conclusions - People in general, and pathologists in
particular, are very good at gleaning information
from graphical or other similar displays - Tools need to be developed to display the results
of these new tests in a more visually efficient
manner
29Additional areas of Basic Informatics Research
- Knowledge Management Tools
- Seamless access into on-line databases
- Medical equivalents of google
- Decision support systems
- Not necessarily expert systems
- Computer assisted diagnosis
- Role in increasing utility of whole-slide imaging
- Modeling of biological systems
- Better prediction of tumor biology based on
particular collection of mutations - Customized therapies and personalized medicine
- Pharmacogenomics
30Pathology Informatics - A Subspecialty?
- Arguments for
- Skill set and knowledge base beyond basic
pathology - Departments/practices benefit from individuals
with specialty training in informatics - Improves recognition and validity of discipline
- Makes a more credible argument for ownership or
at least a role in institutional information
system decisions - Arguments against
- With little agreement about the scope, what would
be the curriculum? - Hematopathology model vs Immunohistochemistry
model
31The Future of Pathology
Data Provider or Diagnostic Specialist ??
- To assure our future, we must
- Move quickly to adopt new diagnostic and
prognostic modalities - Be willing to rethink and adjust how and why we
store data electronically - Work with software vendors to steer software
development toward the development of systems
which will meet the long term goal of outcomes
analysis - Invest the resources needed to develop, pilot,
and implement such systems - Accept a quality assurance role for data
integrity to secure the future utility of the
data in our possession - Recognize and support the role Informatics will
have in shaping that future - Develop intradepartmental informatics
initiatives, guided and directed by pathologists - Recognize that informatics is not simply a
technical activity best relegated to others - Leverage our existing and growing informatics
infrastructure to explore new options for data
storage, analysis, interpretation, and
presentation
32The Future of Pathology
- The best way to predict the future is to make
the future
The future of pathology as the diagnostic
specialty is both desirable and attainable, but
it is not being reserved for us. Pathology
departments must take an active role in shaping
their own future, or someone elses vision of the
future will be forced upon us.
33Practical Informatics Course
- Pathology Informatics and the Future of Medicine
(Sinard) - Desktop Computer Hardware/Software (Parwani)
- Digital Imaging Basics (Sinard)
- Break
- Telepathology and Whole Slide Imaging (Parwani)
- Electronic Data Exchange (Sinard)
- Data Standards and Coding (Crowley)