Advanced Computation Laboratory - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

1 / 92
About This Presentation
Title:

Advanced Computation Laboratory

Description:

one PROforma decision task, 8 options. ... A number of prototypes implemented in PROforma and web technologies. Pilot trials initiated ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

Number of Views:56
Avg rating:3.0/5.0
Slides: 93
Provided by: jf148
Category:

less

Transcript and Presenter's Notes

Title: Advanced Computation Laboratory


1
Advanced Computation Laboratory
  • Quinquennial review 2004

2
The Advanced Computation Lab.
  • Like other labs in the LRI the ACL carries out
    basic research that contributes to the mission of
    CRUK in the understanding, prevention, diagnosis
    and treatment of cancer.
  • Our basic research interests are in the
    computational and cognitive sciences.

3
Focus and methods
  • The scientific focus is in understanding
    cognitive processes (e.g. reasoning,
    decision-making and planning, natural language)
    and their integration in natural or artificial
    agents
  • Research methods include formal analysis and
    computational modelling, in silico simulation,
    and experimental and clinical studies.

4
Theory
Computational experiments
Trials
PROforma language
Engineered technologies
Applications
5
A diverse range of projects
  • We hope to bring out three central themes over
    the presentations
  • Practical contributions to cancer care
  • A theoretical centre of gravity
  • A range of technical opportunities arising from
    the theory
  • And welcome comments on strategy as well as
    project specifics

6
Topics
  • Motivation improving care
  • Modelling and rational design of clinical
    processes
  • OpenClinical
  • The CREDO trial
  • Principles of cognitive systems
  • Natural language interfaces
  • From standard pathways to individual care plans
  • Modelling the cognitive organisation

7
Motivation improving care
8
Medicine is a humanly impossible task
  • Up to 97,000 unnecessary deaths p.a. in the US
    are due to medical error. Total national costs
    between 17B and 29B
  • Institute of Medicine, To Err is Human 1999
  • In NHS hospitals overall rate of preventable
    adverse events of 11.7. A third of which led
    to disability or death, others are frequent,
    minor events but together have massive economic
    consequences
  • Vincent et al, BMJ 2001

9
and in oncology
  • Perhaps 16,000 lives could be saved if all
    current knowledge of cancer were properly
    applied
  • ICRF Vision for Cancer, 1995
  • There have been undoubted improvements in
    service delivery but there is still a sense that
    progress has been patchy and that much has yet to
    be achieved.
  • National Service Framework Assessment of NHS
    Cancer Care 2001.

10
Promoting best practice
11
but
  •   Busy clinicians have little time to read
  •   Even if there is time, memories are
    unreliable, working pressures acute
  •   Conventional guidelines address general
    principles of care, not the needs of individual
    patients

12
Can informatics help?
13
ALL Dose adjustment studyJ Bury, C Hurt, A Roy,
L Cheesman, M Bradburn, S Cross, J Fox, V Saha
(submitted)
  • Objectives
  • To assess the clinical value of a decision
    support system designed to assist with dosage
    adjustments during maintenance therapy for
    childhood Acute Lymphoblastic Leukaemia.
  • Decision model
  • one PROforma decision task, 8 options. Each has
    between 1 and 5 criteria associated with it, each
    referring to different clinical situations,
    expressed in terms of 5 parameters.
  • Materials and methods
  • Balanced-block crossover experiment, in which 36
    clinicians with varying degrees of experience
    were asked to decide on oral chemotherapy dosages
    for 8 simulated cases 4 using decision support
    and 4 without.
  • Outcome measures were number of protocol
    consistent dosage decisions time to manage each
    case accuracy of dosage calculations and
    clinicians' opinions about the value and
    usability of the system.

14
Dose adjustment in chemotherapywith CRUK
Paediatric Oncology Group, London Hospital
Bury, Hurt et al, Proc. American Medical
Informatics Association, 2002 Hurt et al, Proc.
AI in Medicine Europe, 2003 Bury et al, British
Journal of Haematology (in submission)
15
ALL Dose adjustment study resultsJ Bury, C
Hurt, A Roy, L Cheesman, M Bradburn, S Cross, J
Fox, V Saha (submitted)

35/36 subjects said they would be likely to use
the system if it were available
16
Triple Assessment C Hurt, V Patkar, R Steele, T
Rose, M Williams, J Fox (report in preparation)
  • Objective
  • To evaluate the potential effect of
    PROforma decision support on clinical decision
    making with respect to national guidelines for
    Triple Assessment.
  • Decision model
  • Pathway included 4 decisions (familial
    risk, type of imaging, type of biopsy, and
    management).
  • Materials and methods
  • 15 hypothetical paper cases covering range of
    clinical scenarios developed by an expert panel
    of five judges (2 breast surgeons, 1 breast
    pathologist, 1 radiologist and 1 geneticist) and
    optimal management for each case was agreed by
    consensus.
  • 24 doctors asked to manage 5 cases with and 5
    without computer support. A balanced block
    design used to allocate cases.

17
Triple Assessment Study Results C Hurt, V
Patkar, R Steele, T Rose, M Williams, J Fox
(report in preparation)
24 participants (17 consultants, 5 specialist
registrars, 1 nurse practitioner) Average number
of years in speciality 9.3 (range 1 - 23)
Would patient care improve with TA decision
support? In favour 16 Undecided 1 Against
7 Would they personally wish to work with TA
decision support? In favour 12 Undecided
3 Against 9
18
Topics
  • Motivation improving care
  • Modelling and rational design of clinical
    processes
  • OpenClinical
  • The CREDO trial
  • Principles of cognitive systems
  • Natural language interfaces
  • From standard pathways to individual care plans
  • Modelling the cognitive organisation

19
Modelling and rational design of clinical
processes
20
The domino model
Clinical goals
Patient data
Actions orders
Protocols pathways
Clinical options
Arguments
21
Decision-makingDose adjustment in ALL
Current dose, duration Platelets, Tolerance
Review dose
Leave dose unchanged
ALL97 Trial criteria
Increase, decrease, leave unchanged
22
Plans and pathwaystriple assessment (imaging
fragment)
Pain, discharge, nodule??
Report
Investigate symptoms for possible Ca
  • Mammogram
  • Ultrasound
  • Registration
  • Report

Mammogram, ultrasound
Ultrasound Mammogram CT etc.
Age, nodule, Family history
23
Triple assessment of breast cancer
Hurt C, Patkar V, Steele R, Rose T, Fox J (in
preparation) Steele R, Fox J Proceedings of
European conference on AI in Medicine, 2003
24
From theory to design
Specialist services
General hospitals
PROforma specification language
Research/ centres of excellence
Primary care
Home and self care
25
From process model to process design PROforma
Decisions
Plans
J Fox and S Das, AAAI and MIT Press 2000
26
A triple assessment model
27
Formal design of clinical processes
28
Tallis NTstandards and interoperability
Care pathways (e.g. PROforma, ASBRU, GLIF)
29
Some PROforma applications
  • ACL
  • CAPSULE, major improvement in GP prescribing (BMJ
    1997)
  • CADMIUM, helping radiographers interpret
    mammograms (Br J Radiol, 1998)
  • This Quinquennium
  • RAGs genetic risk assessment improved capture of
    family history by GPs and high level of
    acceptability (BMJ 2000)
  • CREDO, patient journey for breast cancer
  • Retrogram (developed by InferMed for Roche).
  • HIV-1 genotyping interpreted by software greatly
    improved the virological outcome when added to
    the clinical information for decisions on
    changing antiretroviral therapy. AIDS 2002
  • Promising model for post-genomic medicine

30
InferMed Projects 2003-4 (Arezzo)
  • British Medical Journal - Evidence without
    Effort project with Clinical Evidence.
  • Brown University Pain Management, Long term
    care of the elderly.
  • Mater Misericordiae Dublin 2 electronic
    guidelines
  • New Zealand Ministry of Health Diabetes
    Management in General Practice
  • Eclipsys Inc. - Remarketing Agreement for AREZZO
    in the US. Also supporting PROforma within HL7
    organisation.
  • F Hoffman-La Roche
  • Retrogram
  • Trans-national study (ORAMA) on Acute Renal
    Anaemia using CDS.
  • Pfizer 3 Post-Op pain management guidelines
    (PROSPECT)
  • IBA Healthcare Sepsis in ICUs (Pilot project in
    Singapore)
  • Accenture advocating adoption of AREZZO within
    NHS

31
Topics
  • Motivation improving care
  • Modelling and rational design of clinical
    processes
  • OpenClinical
  • The CREDO trial
  • Principles of cognitive systems
  • Natural language interfaces
  • From standard pathways to individual care plans
  • Modelling the cognitive organisation

32
Fostering quality, safety and ethical practice in
clinical knowledge management
  • OpenClinical

33
www.OpenClinical.org
34
OpenClinical.netA new way of disseminating
knowledge?
35
R Steele et al, Proc. AI in Medicine Europe, 2003
36
OpenClinical.net Developments
  • Initial publications
  • Breast cancer demonstrator
  • NICE BrCa genetics guideline
  • Triple assessment
  • Non-cancer demonstrators (with partners)
  • Repository construction
  • University of Negev (Israel)
  • Interoperability techniques
  • MEDAL Medical Algorithms group (Houston)
  • Funding (EU?)

37
Topics
  • Motivation improving care
  • Modelling and rational design of clinical
    processes
  • OpenClinical
  • The CREDO trial
  • Principles of cognitive systems
  • Natural language interfaces
  • From standard pathways to individual care plans
  • Modelling the cognitive organisation

38
The CREDO trial
39
Supporting the cancer journey
40
CREDO, phase 1 (2002
  • Pathway and decision model developed with
    clinical colleagues (Alyssa Alabassi, Vivek
    Patkar, Matt Williams)

CREDO
41
CREDO, phase 1
  • Total of 222 clinical, patient and communication
    services identified about 65 require
    professional decisions
  • Software demonstrator constructed
  • A number of prototypes implemented in PROforma
    and web technologies
  • Pilot trials initiated

42
Example genetic risk assessment with imaging
43
adding value
44
CREDO content
  • Complete
  • GP referrals (Leicester trial www.infermed.com)
  • Triple assessment (pilot)
  • Planning care of at-risk women (REACT, pilot)
  • NICE guideline genetic risk (to be validated by
    SCHARR)
  • Gail tissue density model/mammogram
  • Cancer staging
  • In development
  • Support for multi-disciplinary meeting
  • Adjuvant therapy
  • Palliative care
  • Therapy planning (REACT/Polyphony)

NB The CREDO PROforma model May be a valuable
research resource in itself, both as a possible
model for other cancers and as a corpus for
investigating formal questions in logic and
knowledge representation
45
65 Decisions
  • If compliance with best practice is 99 then 50
    of women will get perfect care (0.9965)
  • If compliance is 95 then 3 of women will get
    perfect care (0.9565)
  • Our results from several studies suggest actual
    departures from quality standards are between 10
    and 30!

46
I cant believe we really do that badly for our
patients (David Miles, Guys)
  • Paper patients are not representative of
    clinical reality
  • Checks and balances prevent harmful consequences
  • Younger, inexperienced staff might benefit but
    this is just a training issue

47
(No Transcript)
48
Phases of the CREDO trial
  • Phase 1 activities (2003-4) included
  • Service model, technology demonstrator and
    clinical prototypes
  • Detailed development of Work-up and
    Treatment-planning
  • Pilot trials with paper patients
  • Phase 2 activities will include
  • 65 decisions study (what is really going on?)
  • Multi-centre trials of individual clinical
    services
  • Create necessary infrastructure for integrated
    pathway electronic patient records, messaging
    and integration (e.g. medical imaging)
  • Phase 3 activities will include
  • Controlled trial of integrated services

49
Topics
  • Motivation improving care
  • Modelling and rational design of clinical
    processes
  • OpenClinical
  • The CREDO trial
  • Principles of cognitive systems
  • Natural language interfaces
  • From standard pathways to individual care plans
  • Modelling the cognitive organisation

50
From information systems to cognitive systems
the main issues
  • David Glasspool

51
Key issues
  • Flexibility
  • Adaptability
  • Robustness

52
Cognitive systems
  • "Cognitive systems are natural or artificial
    information processing systems, including those
    responsible for perception, learning, reasoning,
    decision-making, communication and action
  • UK DTI Technology Foresight
  • A cognitive system is one that, among other
    things,
  • can reason with appropriately represented
    knowledge
  • can learn from its experiences
  • can explain itself and can accept direction
  • can be aware of its own behavior and reflect on
    its own capabilities
  • can respond in a robust manner to surprises.
  • DARPA

53
Domino as a cognitive system
  • Domino
  • Abstraction from clinical applications.
  • Outline cognitive system / cognitive theory.
  • Correspondences with theories in AI and
    Neuroscience.
  • Norman and Shallice theory (neuroscience)
  • Processes well-specified, interactions poorly
    specified.
  • Existing specification maps cleanly on to Domino.
  • Proving to be productive for the original theory
    for view of Domino as cognitive system.

54
Main Processes
Perspective has changed Initially viewed as a
framework for identifying tasks of interest in
clinical processes moved to dynamic view a
theory of processes involved in intelligent
behaviour.
55
1. Goals Issues
  • Intelligent behaviour is guided by objectives,
    not rigid pathways.
  • Respond flexibly in adverse/changing
    circumstances
  • When actions fail, plan a safe alternative.
  • Rationale of advice must be explicit.
  • Ground explanations in goals.
  • Discuss negotiate with humans/other agents.
  • Critique clinicians' decisions.
  • What formal properties should goals have?
  • What formal constraints must be placed on them?

56
1. Goals Approach
  • Syntax (based on CREDO analysis)
  • ltSituationgt If patient presents with symptoms
    of possible cancer
  • ltVerb phrasegt refer patient to
  • ltNoun phrasegt oncologist
  • ltRestrictionsgt within two weeks
  • ltPolicygt obligatory
  • ltRationalegt Requirement of NHS cancer
    referral policy
  • Semantics (e.g. Winikoff)
  • Known (goals must be explicit if an agent is to
    reason about them)
  • Consistent (goals that conflict should not be
    adopted)
  • Persistent (goals exist so long as their
    success conditions are not satisfied)
  • Unachieved (a goal is dropped precisely when its
    success conditions are true)
  • Possible (a goal is dropped with failure when
    it becomes impossible to achieve)

57
2. Planning
  • Planning is a well established problem in AI
  • STRIPS, POP, LCP, HTNs
  • Medicine raises challenging issues
  • eg uncertainty, change, regulation.
  • What types of planning are useful in cognitive
    systems?
  • How should plans be represented so that they can
    be
  • Created executed?
  • Reasoned about?
  • Explained?
  • Justified?
  • Approach convergence of ideas (Neuroscience, AI,
    Agents) investigation of cognitive mechanisms.

58
3. Plan Execution
  • One area where the unintelligence of machines
    is very obvious.
  • What does it mean to execute a plan
    intelligently?
  • Generalisation Not having to specify every last
    detail.
  • Flexibility Ability to change details to suit
    circumstances while preserving overall
    intentions.
  • Resilience Ability to detect when situation is
    not developing as expected and either adapt the
    plan or request re-planning (or other problem
    solving).
  • Approaches
  • Flexible plan execution in AI (LCP/HTN, BBAI).
  • Goal/action layered hierarchies, and/or trees.
  • Cognizant failure planned recovery from failure.
  • Action plans in neuroscience/cognitive science.

59
4. Monitoring
  • Unmonitored behaviour is dangerous.
  • Reflection/monitoring key to adaptability
    resilience.
  • Approaches in
  • Neuroscience (monitoring processes in
    neurological syndromes).
  • AI (e.g. alarm systems in cognitive
    architectures).
  • Monitoring processes need to
  • Interpret, not just sense, state of world.
  • Take account of goals of actions, not just
    effects.
  • Take account of potentially conflicting agendas
    of different agents need for negotiation.

60
5. Logic of argument
  • Logic and probability theory are classical ways
    to address inference and decision making.
  • With emergence of AI, shortcomings become
    evident.
  • Argument logic
  • Radically new approach.
  • Unifies traditional concepts.
  • Practical foundation for cognitive systems.
  • Ideas from e.g. law, medicine, software
    engineering, education.
  • ACL contribution novel approach to decision
    theory.

61
Summary
  • Basic science agenda for next quinquennium
  • Cognitive systems, emphasising flexibility,
    adaptability robustness through
  • Formalising goals (flexibility, robustness)
  • Planning on goals (adaptability)
  • Decision making (robustness)
  • Plan execution (flexibility)
  • Monitoring (adaptability robustness)

62
Topics
  • Motivation improving care
  • Modelling and rational design of clinical
    processes
  • OpenClinical
  • The CREDO trial
  • Principles of cognitive systems
  • Natural language interfaces
  • From standard pathways to individual care plans
  • Modelling the cognitive organisation

63
Natural language interfaces
64
Semantics of medical knowledge
65
Applying the knowledge
Spoken/typed input
66
Applying the knowledge
Speech recogniser (commercial)
Spoken/typed input
Finite state machine for low level response
selection
High level dialogue manager
67
Extending HOMEY
  • Acquire new concepts and words (inserting items
    into the ontology)
  • Giving clinical orders (generating PROforma
    process specifications)
  • Improved explanation capabilities (reflecting on
    agents beliefs and their justifications, goals
    and intentions)

68
Topics
  • Motivation improving care
  • Modelling and rational design of clinical
    processes
  • OpenClinical
  • The CREDO trial
  • Principles of cognitive systems
  • Natural language interfaces
  • From standard pathways to individual care plans
  • Modelling the cognitive organisation

69
Polyphony From standardised pathways to personal
care plans
70
Individualising care
  • A 34 year old woman with a confirmed BRCA1
    mutation, who has had one child.
  • Probability (risk) of developing breast cancer
    and some factors directly affecting this are
    reasonably well known for this group
  • Many are only qualitatively known or suspected

REACT
71
REACT and Polyphony
72
Polyphony Individualising care
73
The National Programme for ITs concept of the
integrated care pathway
74
Topics
  • Motivation improving care
  • Modelling and rational design of clinical
    processes
  • OpenClinical
  • The CREDO trial
  • Principles of cognitive systems
  • Natural language interfaces
  • From standard pathways to individual care plans
  • Modelling the cognitive organisation

75
Modelling the cognitive organisation
76
Organisations as networks of cognitive agents
COGENT demonstration
77
(No Transcript)
78
Managing referrals an experiment in silico
  • Baseline patients seen in the order that they
    are referred to each centre. Patient joins the
    back of the waiting list at each centre,
    resulting in additive delays.


  • Provisional booking all downstream options are
    given a provisional booking after the referral
    decision is taken this is cancelled and returned
    to pool if not needed.
  • Provisional booking with urgency assessment
    provisional appointments made as before. If
    assessment agent decides to refer on it assesses
    urgency. If non-urgent patient given her
    provisional slot. If urgent and an earlier slot
    she is offered that.

79
In silico referral experiments data
80

State of the art review and require-ments
Formal semantics
ASPIC Novel agents and other technologies based
on argumentation logics EU funded CRUK
(scientific coordination) UPC Barcelona (SP) CUNY
(USA) U Liverpool (UK) U Utrecht (NL) U Surrey
(UK) IRIT Toulouse (FR) NAVUS (DE) ZEUS/Logic DIS
(GR)
New concepts and experiments
Software engineering
Application demonstrators (e.g. medical)
Dissemination, Exploitation
Project management
81
Focus successor to PROforma
  • T Transactions and messages
  • A Autonomy with Accountability
  • R Roles and Responsibilities
  • G Goal based planning and scheduling
  • E Events and time
  • T extended ontology of Tasks

82
Posters
  • ASPIC
  • CREDO
  • Tallis and OpenClinical
  • REACT and Polyphony

83
Topics
  • Motivation improving care
  • Modelling and rational design of clinical
    processes
  • OpenClinical
  • The CREDO trial
  • Principles of cognitive systems
  • Natural language interfaces
  • From standard pathways to individual care plans
  • Modelling the cognitive organisation

84
Remarks from last review
  • Research strategy
  • Exploring the nature, applications and
    implications of the domino provides a broad focus
    for ACL work
  • The virtuous circle is itself a strategy CRUK
    is both a mission-oriented organisation and one
    that values basic research and we think this
    works well

85
Remarks from last review
  • Working with senior clinicians
  • Our work has reached a level of maturity where we
    have something to interest clinicians
  • The CREDO trial is an important opportunity to
    translate research into patient benefit and has
    the interest of senior oncologists
  • Funding the trial is a high priority

86
Supervised entity
GENISYS (NAVUS, Ravensburg)
Delegate agent
Core
GENESYS middleware
Supervisor agent
operator
Prototype
Platform
Concept
87
Supervised entity
GENISYS Tallis TalliSYS
Delegate agent
Core
GENESYS middleware
operator
Prototype
Platform
Concept
88
Summary of short to medium term objectives
89
Applications projects
  • CREDO,
  • Priority is to secure funding for trial
  • Continue development of clinical services
  • Develop integrated system and initiate
    multi-centre trial
  • OpenClinical.net
  • Develop repository and carry out trial
  • Secure funding for collaborative development

90
Informatics projects
  • Tallis NT emphasis on standards,
    interoperability and integration.
  • REACT and Polyphony improved planning and
    scheduling
  • HOMEY spoken dialogue more natural user
    interfaces exploiting ontological knowledge and
    task constraints

91
Basic research
  • Continuing investigation of the main functions of
    the domino model as a basis for understanding
    natural and artificial cognitive systems
  • ASPIC Non-classical logics as a general
    foundation for novel agents
  • TARGET successor to PROforma

92
Assessment of approach
  • The ACLs theoretical and interdisciplinary
    approach spreads resources thinly but is highly
    productive
  • The continuity provided by CRUK core funding is
    very helpful, lets us take a long view, though
    some refinements would be valuable

93
(No Transcript)
94
Project Tallis NTstandards and interoperability
Care pathways (e.g. PROforma, ASBRU, GLIF)
95
BusinessProcessModelling(BPMN)
96
Mapping BPMN toPROforma
T Benson and R PageNPfIT, 2004
97
Translating research into the clinic
Lab data, Ontologies etc.
  • A significant
  • opportunity?

Research trials
Standard care pathways
Individual patient profiles
Individual care plans
Patient services
Clinical services
Administrative services
98
opportunities for collaboration (but
unfortunately not funding)
  • SCHARR
  • will review PROforma version of NICE genetics
    guideline, possible larger collaboration on
    further cancer guidelines
  • National electronic Library for Health (genetics)
  • Proposed joint development based on RAGs
  • National Patent Safety Agency
  • Creation and maintenance of safety case methods
    and technologies (RED box)
  • NCRI informatics task force
  • Translation project in discussion
  • SPSS
  • Agreed to support development of open data portal
Write a Comment
User Comments (0)
About PowerShow.com