The use of natural language processing in palliative care research: A scoping review

Author:

Sarmet Max12ORCID,Kabani Aamna3,Coelho Luis4,dos Reis Sara Seabra4,Zeredo Jorge L2,Mehta Ambereen K5

Affiliation:

1. Tertiary Referral Center of Neuromuscular Diseases, Hospital de Apoio de Brasília, Brazil

2. Graduate Department of Health Science and Technology, University of Brasília, Brazil

3. Johns Hopkins University, School of Medicine, USA

4. Center of Innovation in Engineering and Industrial Technology, Polytechnic of Porto - School of Engineering (ISEP), Portugal

5. Palliative Care Program, Division of General Internal Medicine, Johns Hopkins Bayview Medical Center, Johns Hopkins University, School of Medicine, USA

Abstract

Background: Natural language processing has been increasingly used in palliative care research over the last 5 years for its versatility and accuracy. Aim: To evaluate and characterize natural language processing use in palliative care research, including the most commonly used natural language processing software and computational methods, data sources, trends in natural language processing use over time, and palliative care topics addressed. Design: A scoping review using the framework by Arksey and O’Malley and the updated recommendations proposed by Levac et al. was conducted. Sources: PubMed, Web of Science, Embase, Scopus, and IEEE Xplore databases were searched for palliative care studies that utilized natural language processing tools. Data on study characteristics and natural language processing instruments used were collected and relevant palliative care topics were identified. Results: 197 relevant references were identified. Of these, 82 were included after full-text review. Studies were published in 48 different journals from 2007 to 2022. The average sample size was 21,541 (median 435). Thirty-two different natural language processing software and 33 machine-learning methods were identified. Nine main sources for data processing and 15 main palliative care topics across the included studies were identified. The most frequent topic was mortality and prognosis prediction. We also identified a trend where natural language processing was frequently used in analyzing clinical serious illness conversations extracted from audio recordings. Conclusions: We found 82 papers on palliative care using natural language processing methods for a wide-range of topics and sources of data that could expand the use of this methodology. We encourage researchers to consider incorporating this cutting-edge research methodology in future studies to improve published palliative care data.

Publisher

SAGE Publications

Subject

Anesthesiology and Pain Medicine,General Medicine

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