Title: NIBIB Health IT Initiatives and Medical Image Sharing
1NIBIB Health IT Initiativesand Medical Image
Sharing
The 4th US-China Roundtable Conference on
Scientific Data Cooperation March 29-30, 2010
- James Luo Ph.D.
- Program Director, Biomedical Informatics
Programs - National Institute of Biomedical Imaging and
Bioengineering - National Institutes of Health
2US Healthcare Expenditures
- US total healthcare expenditures reached 2.3
trillion in 2008 - 7,681 per person
- 16.2 of total GDP
- Projection it will reach 4.48 trillions (19.3
of GDP) in 2019 - Source DHHS
3Health IT ARRA
- A 2005 RAND study projects that the adoption of
Health IT in healthcare sectors - A mean annual savings of almost 42 billion in US
- The American Recovery and Reinvestment Act of
2009 (ARRA) provides over 19 billion stimulus
funds for the development and adoption of Health
IT - 2 billion for ONC to set up the standards and
meaningful use - Healthcare Information Technology Standards Panel
(HITSP) - IHE, HL7, DICOM, etc.
- Nationwide Health Information Network (NHIN)
- Establishment of Certification Programs for
Health IT - Certification Commission for Healthcare IT
(CCHIT) - 17 billion incentives for adoption of EHR
4Benefits of Health IT
- Interoperable Health IT can improve individual
patient care in numerous ways - Provide complete and accurate health information
at the point of care. - Allow secure exchange between patients and
providers. - Allow more informed decision making to enhance
the quality and reliability, while reducing
errors - Provide increased efficiencies in care and
administration - Reduce unnecessary or repetitive tests.
- Improve population health.
- Integrated EHR systems with image, genomics,
pharmacogenomics (PGx) data and AHRQ clinical
guidelines support evidence-based clinical
decision and personalized medicine
5Kaiser Case Study
- A Kaiser study published in Health Affairs showed
that using EHR in 2004 to 2007 - office visit rate in Kaisers Hawaii region
dropped 26.2 percent. - phone visits increased more than 8 fold,
- online messaging rose nearly 600 percent.
- In 2007
- office visits 66 (compare to
100 in 2004) - phone visits 30
- online consultations 4
- The use of EHR and better connectivity with
patients (phone, online) has made Kaiser more
efficient
6Kaiser Case Study 2
- With complete patient information available to
them in the EHR, physicians can respond to
patients questions about minor problems without
seeing them. - These modes of patient contact dont lower either
patient satisfaction or the quality of care. - it reduces errors.
- Integrated EHR systems reap the benefits due to
increased efficiency, reducing office visits,
avoiding redundant tests and prescriptions
7Image in Health IT
- Medical images play a critical role in
- diagnosis and prognosis of diseases
- therapeutic planning
- medical decision-making, safety assessment, and
risk management - clinical research to discover effective
technologies, therapeutics, diagnostics, and
prevention strategies for different populations - tracking specific diseases and response to drug
- analyses the effectiveness of therapeutic
- Important part of electronic health records (EHR)
8NIBIBs Initiatives in Health IT and Clinical
Image Sharing
- NIBIB launched its Health IT and clinical image
sharing program in 2009 - NIBIBRSNA research project develop a network
for patient-controlled medical image sharing
built upon the IHE (Integrating the Healthcare
Enterprise) HITSP and ONC accepted standards. - Allow image sharing across RHIOs UCSF, U.
Maryland, Mayo, U. Chicago, Mount Sinai. - NIBIB awarded Grand Opportunity (GO) grants in
clinical image sharing. - Address image sharing in RHIOs
- U. Alabama, Birmingham
- Wake Forest U.
9Objectives of Clinical Image Sharing
- To enable the sharing of radiology images across
health care institutions and vendor systems. - To aim toward increasing the speed and accuracy
of data on which medical decisions are based, - To reduce imaging redundancy and overutilization.
- To improve the quality of patient care by making
images immediately available. - A key feature patients control the access to and
sharing of the images, e.g. - Consumer based control and ownership of their
imaging exams through Personal Health Records
(PHRs) - Rural, underserved populations or academic
patient care environment image sharing is
encouraged.
10T
11T
12Integrating Data, Models, and Reasoning in
Critical Care
- Challenges
- data overload, false alarms, poor data
organization in the ICU - early warning signs often difficult to recognize
- Opportunity
- Richness of ICU data makes possible advanced
monitoring systems to track and predict
pathophysiologic state of patients.
Roger Mark, Massachusetts Institute Technology,
R01 EB001659 (BRP)
13Roger Mark, Massachusetts Institute Technology,
RO1-EB001659 (BRP)
Nursing notes and discharge summaries are
de-identified automatically for the research
database.
Techniques to assess signal quality
- Predictive alerts for impending hemo-dynamic
instability
14MIMIC II Database Multi-parameter Intelligent
Monitoring for Intensive Care
- a massive research-enabling database
- supports development and evaluation of advanced
patient monitoring systems - contents 30,000 patient records 4,000 include
waveforms - data includes physiologic trends discharge
summaries nurses notes IV meds physician
orders lab reports ventilator settings etc.
De-identified database is made freely available
to research community via PhysioNet
(www.physionet.org)
Roger Mark, Massachusetts Institute Technology,
R01 EB001659 (BRP)
15PhysioNet the research resource for complex
physiologic signals
16Design of the PhysioNet Website
17What is PhysioBank?
PhysioBank currently includes gt40 collections
of cardiopulmonary, neural, and other biomedical
signals from healthy subjects and patients with a
variety of conditions with major public health
implications, including sudden cardiac death,
congestive heart failure, epilepsy, gait
disorders, sleep apnea, and aging.
18Who Uses PhysioNet / Where?
- gt30,000 researchers, students, manufacturers,
educators, each month - From all 50 US states and DC
- Users from gt100 other countries
19Image Data Sharing in Research
- Alzheimer's disease neuroimaging initative (ADNI)
gt60 million, PPP - Goal collection of data and samples (800 cases)
- to establish a brain imaging biomarker,
- to identify the best markers for following
disease progression and monitoring treatment
response - Determine the optimum methods for acquiring,
processing, and distributing images and
biomarkers in conjunction with clinical and
neuropsychological data. - Validate imaging and biomarker data by
correlating with neuropsychological and clinical
data. - Provide public access to all data and
bio-specimens http//www.loni.ucla.edu/ADNI/
20Hippocampal Atrophy as a Quantitative Trait in a
Genome-Wide Association Study Identifying Novel
Susceptibility Genes for Alzheimers Disease
UC Irvine S. Potkin, G Guffanti, A Lakatos, JA
Turner, F Kruggel, JH Fallon, Other
Contributors AJ Saykin, A Orro, S Lupoli, E
Salvi, M Weiner, F Macciardi, ADNI
- The case-control analysis identified APOE and a
recent risk gene, TOMM40, at a genome-wide
significance level of p-value 10-6 - The quantitative trait analysis identified 21
genes or chromosomal areas with at least one SNP
with a p-value 10-6. - Apoptosis, cell cycle impairment and the
alteration of protein folding and degradation
through ubiquination are among the candidate
pathophysiological mechanisms
Adapted from Potkin, Guffanti, et al. (2009)
PLoS ONE 4(8) e6501
21Shen et al 2010 Overview
QCed genotyping data
FreeSurfer 56 volume or cortical thickness
measures
530,992 SNPs
Baseline MRI Scans
142 QTs
GWAS of Imaging Phenotypes
Strong associations represented by heat maps
VBM 86 GM density measures
Refined modeling of candidate association
GWAS of candidate QT
VBM of candidate SNP
22Shen et al 2010 Findings
- Whole genome, whole brain ROI analysis
- As expected, SNPs in the APOE and TOMM40 genes
were confirmed as markers strongly associated
with multiple brain regions. - Other top SNPs were proximal to the EPHA4, TP63
and NXPH1 genes. - Refined analysis for a candidate SNP
- rs6463843 (flanking NXPH1) was associated with
reduced global and regional GM density across
diagnostic groups in TT relative to GG
homozygotes. - Interaction analysis indicated that AD patients
homozygous for the T allele showed differential
vulnerability to right hippocampal GM density
loss. - NXPH1 codes for a protein implicated in promotion
of adhesion between dendrites and axons, a key
factor in synaptic integrity, the loss of which
is a hallmark of AD. - A genome wide, whole brain search strategy has
the potential to reveal novel candidate genes and
loci warranting further investigation and
replication.
23ADNI Genetics UCLA, Thompson Lab
Voxelwise GWAS Ran genome-wide association for a
quarter of a million points across 700 subjects -
new gene discovery method many new SNPs power
calculations for replication (Jason Stein et al,
NeuroImage, in press) GRIN2b, a common glutamate
receptor genetic variant, is associated with
greater temporal lobe atrophy and with AD
NMDA-receptor is a target for memantine therapy
(Jason Stein et al, NeuroImage, in press) FTO,
an obesity risk gene carried by 46 of Europeans,
is associated with 10-15 frontal and occipital
atrophy, and with a 1.7kg weight gain, on
average (April Ho et al, PNAS, in revision)
Stein et al, NeuroImage, in press