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Abstract Number: 206

American College Of Rheumatology’s Rheumatology Informatics System For Effectiveness Registry Pilot

Peter J. Embi1, William Stephens2 and Rachel Myslinski3, 1Biomedical Informatics & Internal Medicine, The Ohio State University, Columbus, OH, 2College of Medicine, Ohio State University, Columbus, OH, 3Practice, Advocacy, & Quality, American College of Rheumatology, Atlanta, GA

Meeting: 2013 ACR/ARHP Annual Meeting

Keywords: Quality Indicators and quality of care

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Session Information

Title: Health Services Research, Quality Measures and Quality of Care-Rheumatoid Arthritis

Session Type: Abstract Submissions (ACR)

Background/Purpose: There is a significant need in the rheumatology community to access and integrate data across diverse patient populations in order to aid quality improvement efforts, help rheumatologists meet quality reporting requirements, as well engage in clinical research. We report on the pilot results of the American College of Rheumatology’s registry expansion initiative that links disparate clinical data resources across multiple clinical sites and systems in support of rheumatology practice and research.  This effort is aimed at providing a reliable, cost-effective means of connecting data from multiple EHR systems, using these data for quality improvement, quality reporting, and research querying.

Methods: The design and execution of effective quality improvement projects and clinical studies requires access to high quality, longitudinal data.  In most instances, such data are collected, formalized, stored and retrieved using project- or organization-specific disease registries or data warehouses.  It is increasingly desirable to access data across multiple clinical sites for quality improvement and clinical research purposes, but disparate EHR systems remain difficult to connect for data interchange.  Furthermore, in these types of settings, organizational and policy barriers often preclude the use of centralized repositories.  To address this need, the ACR is piloting this system – called the Rheumatology Informatics System for Effectiveness (RISE) – to enhance registry efforts to benefit rheumatic disease research and quality reporting efforts. RISE is a federated system of interconnected clinical data repositories.  The RISE architecture allows data to remain at the sites thereby allowing sites full control of their data. Data is accessed by a Federated Query Processor service that maintains no source practice data internally, but instead acts as a secure router and aggregator for information as it passes through the grid. The RISE system enables access to clinical data across multiple sites while maintaining high levels of data security.

Results: The model employed by RISE uses an approach to enable the federated query of geographically distributed data sources. This platform is being implemented at 6 sites, with several more planned. The initial sites include a variety of academic and community centers, which demonstrate feasibility for implementation in a variety of practice settings. The following table shows aggregate data from two of the initial sites:

Query

Aggregate Result

Number of patients with an RA diagnosis

6,131

Number of patients with a RAPID score ≥ 3

260*

Number of patients taking methotrexate

6,724

All patients in the registry

44,390

Conclusion: The design, deployment and initial use of the ACR RISE network addresses the need for data access across disparate sites using otherwise non-interoperable information systems and creates the opportunity for a robust source of rheumatology clinical data that can be used for multiple purposes.  We believe that such an approach to distributed data sharing in rheumatology will help advance science and improve clinical practice.


Disclosure:

P. J. Embi,
None;

W. Stephens,
None;

R. Myslinski,
None.

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All abstracts accepted to ACR Convergence are under media embargo once the ACR has notified presenters of their abstract’s acceptance. They may be presented at other meetings or published as manuscripts after this time but should not be discussed in non-scholarly venues or outlets. The following embargo policies are strictly enforced by the ACR.

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