Purpose: Electronic medical records are a valuable source of information about patients' clinical status but are often free-text documents that require laborious manual review to be exploited. Techniques from computer science have been investigated, but the literature has marginally focused on non-English language texts. We developed RUBY, a tool designed in collaboration with IBM-France to automatically structure clinical information from French medical records of patients with breast cancer.
Materials and methods: RUBY, which exploits state-of-the-art Named Entity Recognition models combined with keyword extraction and postprocessing rules, was applied on clinical texts. We investigated the precision of RUBY in extracting the target information.
Results: RUBY has an average precision of 92.8% for the Surgery report, 92.7% for the Pathology report, 98.1% for the Biopsy report, and 81.8% for the Consultation report.
Conclusion: These results show that the automatic approach has the potential to effectively extract clinical knowledge from an extensive set of electronic medical records, reducing the manual effort required and saving a significant amount of time. A deeper semantic analysis and further understanding of the context in the text, as well as training on a larger and more recent set of reports, including those containing highly variable entities and the use of ontologies, could further improve the results.