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NCI

EVS

has

extensive

partnerships

with

government

and

standards

organizations

beyond

NIH

to

develop

terminology

standards,

content,

technology,

and

operational

support.

 

  Such

partnerships

are

designed

to

directly

support

NCI's

cancer

research

mission,

improving

regulatory,

federal

and

community

practices

in

ways

that

contribute

to

the

conduct

and

sharing

of

cancer

research

while

also

having

a

positive

impact

on

the

wider

biomedical

community.

 

The

following

collaborations

are

included

below: {toc:minLevel=2} h2.

in this section:

Table of Contents
minLevel2

U.S.

Food

and

Drug

Administration

(FDA)

FDA

has

worked

with

EVS

since

2001,

with

formal

Memoranda

of

Understanding

starting

in

2004,

to

develop

and

harmonize

terminology

content,

standards

and

systems

in

areas

of

mutual

interest

such

as

drugs,

devices,

patient

safety,

and

clinical

trials.

FDA

has

chosen

EVS

and

NCI

Thesaurus

(NCIt)

for

developing

and

publishing

many

important

terminology

sets;

some

15,000

FDA

terms

in

over

20

defined

subsets

are

now

maintained

in

NCIt

and

required

for

regulatory

reporting

and

other

purposes.

These

include:

* *

  • Structured
  • Product
  • Labeling
  • (SPL):
*
  • Standard
  • terminology
  • for
  • Drug
  • Establishment
  • Registration
  • (Regulated
  • Product
  • Submission),
  • Drug
  • Listing
  • and
  • the
  • Content
  • of
  • Labels.
  • 16
  • NCIt
  • subsets
  • used
  • for
  • submission
  • of
  • proposed
  • labeling
  • by
  • all
  • manufacturers
  • using
  • electronic
  • formats.
  • There
  • are
  • 9,466
  • establishments
  • from
  • over
  • 100
  • countries
  • that
  • use
  • the
  • SPL
  • terminology
  • in
  • order
  • to
  • comply
  • with
  • federal
  • regulations
  • to
  • list
  • their
  • products.
  • There
  • are
  • approximately
  • 40,000
  • subscribers
  • to
  • the
  • FDA's
  • SPL
  • LISTSERV,
  • and
  • this
  • is
  • one
  • of
  • the
  • primary
  • mechanisms
  • to
  • inform
  • users
  • of
  • changes
  • to
  • the
  • SPL
  • terminology
  • that
  • is
  • maintained
  • by
  • NCI.
  • FDA
  • does
  • not
  • track
  • the
  • number
  • of
  • hits
against [http://www.fda.gov/ForIndustry/DataStandards/default.htm|http://www.fda.gov/ForIndustry/DataStandards/default.htm] and its sub pages, but they suspect that the number of hits is very high; when firms do not select the correct NCIt code, their submitted SPL file will not pass validation. * *Unique Ingredient Identifier (UNII)* codes are being developed by FDA to uniquely identify all ingredients used in marketed medications in the United States, as well as substances in biologics, foods and devices. Each UNII is assigned based on molecular structure or other immutable characteristics. FDA provides a [full set of published UNII codes|http://fdasis.nlm.nih.gov/srs/jsp/srs/uniiListDownload.jsp] and a [search page|http://fdasis.nlm.nih.gov/srs/srs.jsp] on a Web site now hosted by the National Library of Medicine (NLM) and updated approximately monthly. * * EVS collaborated with FDA on the launch and early publication of UNII codes. More than 12,000 UNII codes have been included in corresponding NCIt concepts, and more continue to be added each month, although NCIt no longer provides comprehensive representation of all UNII concepts. Most of these 12,000 concepts were included in NCIt because of their therapeutic and other interest for cancer and related research, and they are extensively annotated with definitions, chemical formulae, CAS registry numbers, synonyms, and other information to help support such research. Files providing UNIIs that have matching NCIt concept codes are available for download in [Excel|http://evs.nci.nih.gov/ftp1/FDA/UNII/FDA-UNII_NCIt_Subsets.xls] and [text|http://evs.nci.nih.gov/ftp1/FDA/UNII/FDA-UNII_NCIt_Subsets.txt] formats. * *CDRH Device Event Problem Codes:* NCIt subsets used for the reporting of medical device problems to FDA. CDRH is responsible for ensuring the safety and effectiveness of medical devices and eliminating unnecessary human exposure to man-made radiation from medical, occupational and consumer products. Approximately 200 organizations from some 3,000 different reporting locations report to the CDRH using NCIt terminology. CDRH receives approximately 35,000 submissions per month that are based on NCIt terminology. * *Individual Case Safety Report (ICSR):* NCIt subsets used for adverse event reporting. Proposed regulations for electronic submissions will create similar levels of use for these subsets. * *eCTD (electronic Common Technical Documents):* Standard terminology for regulatory forms required by the Center for Drug Evaluation and Research (CDER). * *Drug Submissions*: Beginning June 1, 2009, FDA no longer accepts paper submissions for drug establishment registration and listing unless a waiver is granted. Moving from a paper-based format to an electronic system will improve the timeliness and accuracy of the submissions. This is not possible without the terminology provided by NCIt. Of 22,246 New Drug related Submissions from October 2009 - September 2010, (63%) were in electronic format submissions that required terminology from NCIt. * *Stability*: NCIt provides terminology for FDA and HL7 Stability Data Standards, including human pharmaceuticals, animal drugs and medical devices that are in regulatory submissions, amendments, supplements and annual reports. For more information, visit the NCI website [http://www.cancer.gov/cancertopics/cancerlibrary/terminologyresources/FDA|http://www.cancer.gov/cancertopics/cancerlibrary/terminologyresources/FDA|http://www.cancer.gov/cancertopics/cancerlibrary/terminologyresources/FDA]. +EVS Related References+ # McCullough CE, Reed TL, Kaufman-Rivi D. *A Tool to Analyze Medical Device Problems: The Food and Drug Administration Device Problem Codes.* ??J Clinical Engineering??. 2012 Apr/Jun;37(2):56–62. doi: 10.1097/JCE.0b013e31824c99f1 \[[Online|http://journals.lww.com/jcejournal/Abstract/2012/04000/A_Tool_to_Analyze_Medical_Device_Problems__The.17.aspx]\] # Reed TL, Kaufman-Rivi D. *FDA adverse Event Problem Codes: standardizing the classification of device and patient problems associated with medical device use.* ??Biomed Instrum Technol.?? 2010 May-Jun;44(3):248-56. PubMed PMID: 20715359. \[[PubMed|http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/20715359]\] h2. Clinical Data Interchange Standards Consortium (CDISC) CDISC is an international, non-profit organization that develops and supports global data standards for medical research. CDISC is working actively with EVS to develop and support controlled terminology for a wide spectrum of clinical and nonclinical studies. CDISC terminology goes through an extensive process of content development and public review before it is declared ready for release. All CDISC controlled terminology -- more than 9,800 terms -- is maintained and published as NCIt subsets, as part of a partnership started in 2002. The main terminology efforts encompassed by the CDISC-EVS partnership are shown below: * *Study Data Tabulation Model (SDTM)* is an international standard for clinical research data, and is approved by the FDA as a standard electronic submission format. EVS maintains and distributes SDTM controlled terminology as part of NCI Thesaurus. More information is available at [CDISC's SDTM Web page|http://www.cdisc.org/sdtm]. SDTM has been downloaded more than 14,000 times in over 60 countries, primarily for institutional use. More than 270 commercial organizations use SDTM, as do numerous academic, non-profit and research organizations. * *Questionnaire (QS) Terminology* contains standardized, controlled terminology for commonly used questionnaires in biomedical and therapeutic area research. EVS maintains and distributes Questionnaire controlled terminology as part of NCI Thesaurus. More information is available at [CDISC's Questionnaire Web page|http://www.cdisc.org/content2909]. Questionnaire terminology can be used for both collection (CDASH) and submission (SDTM) data sets. * *Clinical Data Acquisition Standards Harmonization (CDASH)* develops clinical research study content standards in collaboration with sixteen partner organizations including NCI. EVS maintains and distributes CDASH controlled terminology, a subset of SDTM, as part of NCI Thesaurus. More information is available at [CDISC's CDASH Web page|http://www.cdisc.org/cdash]. * *Analysis Data Model (ADaM)* supports efficient generation, replication, review and submission of analysis results from clinical trial data. EVS maintains and distributes ADaM controlled terminology as part of NCI Thesaurus. * *Standard for Exchange of Non-Clinical Data (SEND)* extends Study Data Tabulation Model (SDTM) for non-clinical studies. SEND guides the organization, structure and format of standard nonclinical tabulation data sets for interchange between organizations such as sponsors and CROs and for submission to a regulatory authority such as the FDA. NCI EVS maintains and distributes SEND controlled terminology as part of NCI Thesaurus. It now includes some 1,900 additional terms beyond the SDTM terminology that is also part of the SEND standard. *The CDISC Shared Health and Research Electronic Library (SHARE)* project aims to create a global, electronically accessible library of CDISC standard metadata that can be used to improve biomedical research and its link with healthcare. The SHARE metadata repository is envisioned to help find, understand and use clinical metadata efficiently by enabling standardized data element definitions for use in software applications. CDISC has created a data element curation process, including terminology linking, using the LexWiki and LexGrid technologies; this process provides a collaborative framework and platform for representation and harmonization of clinical study data elements. CDISC will use open tools created by NCI as the basis for developing SHARE. For more information, visit the NCI website [http://www.cancer.gov/cancertopics/cancerlibrary/terminologyresources/CDISC|http://www.cancer.gov/cancertopics/cancerlibrary/terminologyresources/CDISC]. +EVS Related References+ # Elkin PL. *Springer Terminology Related Standards Development.* In Elkin PL, ed. ??Terminology and Terminological Systems??, Ch.7 pp.107-123, Springer London, 2012. \[[Springer|http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-1-4471-2816-8_7]\] # Haber MW, Kisler BW, Lenzen M, Wright LW. *Controlled Terminology for Clinical Research: A Collaboration between CDISC and NCI Enterprise Vocabulary Services.* ??Drug Information Journal?? 2007;41(3):405-412. \[[Available online|http://www.nxtbook.com/nxtbooks/dia/druginformationjournal0507/index.php?startpage=142]\] # Jiang G, Solbrig HR, Iberson-Hurst D, Kush RD, Chute CG. *A Collaborative Framework for Representation and Harmonization of Clinical Study Data Elements Using Semantic MediaWiki.* ??AMIA Summits Transl Sci Proc. 2010?? Mar 1;2010:11-5. PubMed PMID: 21347136; PubMed Central PMCID: PMC3041544. \[[PubMed|http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/21347136]\] # Kush RD. *Interoperability for the Learning Health System.* ??Digital Infrastructure for the Learning Health System: The Foundation for Continuous Improvement in Health and Health Care: Workshop Series Summary.?? Grossmann C, Powers B, McGinnis JM eds. Institute of Medicine (2011) pp.108-114. \[[Online|http://books.nap.edu/openbook.php?record_id=12912&page=108]\] h2. National Council of Prescription Drug Providers (NCPDP) NCPDP is a not-for-profit, ANSI-accredited, Standards Development Organization with over 1,600 members representing virtually every sector of the pharmacy services industry. NCPDP creates and promotes the transfer of data related to medications, supplies, and services within the healthcare system through the development of standards and industry guidance. In 2009, NCPDP decided to partner with EVS to use NCIt subsets to support two of those standards, employed by some 200 vendors serving approximately 15,000 pharmacies nationwide: * *NCPDP SCRIPT Standard* supports messages for new prescriptions, prescription changes, refill requests, prescription fill status notification, prescription cancellation, medication history, and transactions for long term care environments. Many large providers such as First DataBank and Surescripts, the nation's largest e-prescriber, use this standard. Surescripts alone connects thousands of pharmacies across the US, and is connected to the largest network of payers and Medicaid Fee for Service payers nationwide. * *NCPDP Telecommunication Standard* supports the electronic communication of claims and other transactions between pharmacy providers, insurance carriers, third party administrators, and other responsible parties. It is the standard used for eligibility, claims processing, reporting and other pharmacy industry communications, as designated in HIPAA. More than 4 billion claims are processed each year using this standard. For more information, visit the NCI website [http://www.cancer.gov/cancertopics/cancerlibrary/terminologyresources/ncpdp|http://www.cancer.gov/cancertopics/cancerlibrary/terminologyresources/ncpdp]. +EVS Related References+ # Liu H, Burkhart Q, Bell DS. *Evaluation of the NCPDP Structured and Codified Sig Format for e-prescriptions.* ??J Am Med Inform Assoc??. 2011 Sep
  • against the FDA Resources for Data Standards page and its sub pages, but they suspect that the number of hits is very high; when firms do not select the correct NCIt code, their submitted SPL file will not pass validation.
  • Unique Ingredient Identifier (UNII) codes are being developed by FDA to uniquely identify all ingredients used in marketed medications in the United States, as well as substances in biologics, foods and devices. Each UNII is assigned based on molecular structure or other immutable characteristics. FDA provides a full set of published UNII codes and a search page on a Web site now hosted by the National Library of Medicine (NLM) and updated approximately monthly.
     
    EVS collaborated with FDA on the launch and early publication of UNII codes. More than 12,000 UNII codes have been included in corresponding NCIt concepts, and more continue to be added each month, although NCIt no longer provides comprehensive representation of all UNII concepts. Most of these 12,000 concepts were included in NCIt because of their therapeutic and other interest for cancer and related research, and they are extensively annotated with definitions, chemical formulae, CAS registry numbers, synonyms, and other information to help support such research. Files providing UNIIs that have matching NCIt concept codes are available for download in Excel and text formats.
  • CDRH Device Event Problem Codes: NCIt subsets used for the reporting of medical device problems to FDA. CDRH is responsible for ensuring the safety and effectiveness of medical devices and eliminating unnecessary human exposure to man-made radiation from medical, occupational and consumer products. Approximately 200 organizations from some 3,000 different reporting locations report to the CDRH using NCIt terminology. CDRH receives approximately 35,000 submissions per month that are based on NCIt terminology.
  • Individual Case Safety Report (ICSR): NCIt subsets used for adverse event reporting. Proposed regulations for electronic submissions will create similar levels of use for these subsets.
  • eCTD (electronic Common Technical Documents): Standard terminology for regulatory forms required by the Center for Drug Evaluation and Research (CDER).
  • Drug Submissions: Beginning June 1, 2009, FDA no longer accepts paper submissions for drug establishment registration and listing unless a waiver is granted. Moving from a paper-based format to an electronic system will improve the timeliness and accuracy of the submissions. This is not possible without the terminology provided by NCIt. Of 22,246 New Drug related Submissions from October 2009 - September 2010, (63%) were in electronic format submissions that required terminology from NCIt.
  • Stability: NCIt provides terminology for FDA and HL7 Stability Data Standards, including human pharmaceuticals, animal drugs and medical devices that are in regulatory submissions, amendments, supplements and annual reports.

EVS resources and systems are also used in FDA efforts such as the Janus Clinical Trials Repository (CTR) Project , a standards-based repository of subject level clinical trial data to support regulatory review and patient centered outcomes research (PCOR).

For more information, visit the NCI website FDA terminology resources.

EVS Related References

  1. McCullough CE, Reed TL, Kaufman-Rivi D.
    A Tool to Analyze Medical Device Problems: The Food and Drug Administration Device Problem Codes.
    J Clinical Engineering. 2012 Apr/Jun;37(2):56–62. doi: 10.1097/JCE.0b013e31824c99f1 [Online
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  2. Reed TL, Kaufman-Rivi D.
    FDA adverse Event Problem Codes: standardizing the classification of device and patient problems associated with medical device use.
    Biomed Instrum Technol. 2010 May-Jun;44(3):248-56. PubMed PMID: 20715359. [PubMed]

Clinical Data Interchange Standards Consortium (CDISC)

CDISC is an international, non-profit organization that develops and supports global data standards for medical research. CDISC is working actively with EVS to develop and support controlled terminology for a wide spectrum of clinical and nonclinical studies.

CDISC terminology is being widely adopted as a standard for study coding and data submissions. In the United States, draft FDA guidance on regulatory submissions (see Study Data Technical Conformance Guide) recommends CDISC terminology as a set of controlled terms that meet the FDA requirements for the implementation of the CDISC standards. As part of the General Considerations of Controlled Terminology regarding CDISC, the Guide states: "Sponsors should use the terminologies and code lists in the CDISC Controlled Terminology, which can be found at the NCI (National Cancer Institute) Enterprise Vocabulary Services."

CDISC terminology goes through an extensive process of content development and public review before it is declared ready for release. All CDISC controlled terminology – more than 10,000 terms – is maintained and published as NCI Thesaurus (NCIt) subsets, as part of a partnership started in 2002. The main terminology efforts encompassed by the CDISC-EVS partnership are shown below:

  • Study Data Tabulation Model (SDTM) is an international standard for clinical research data, and is approved by the FDA and Japan’s Pharmaceuticals and Medical Devices Agency (PMDA)
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    as a standard electronic submission format. EVS maintains and distributes SDTM controlled terminology as part of NCIt. More information is available at CDISC's SDTM Web page
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    . SDTM has been downloaded more than 14,000 times in over 90 countries, primarily for institutional use. More than 270 commercial organizations use SDTM, as do numerous academic, non-profit and research organizations.
  • Questionnaire (QS) and Functional Test (FT) Terminology contains standardized, controlled terminology for commonly used questionnaires and functional tests in biomedical and therapeutic area research. EVS maintains and distributes Questionnaire controlled terminology as part of NCIt. More information is available at CDISC's Questionnaire Web page
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    . Questionnaire terminology can be used for both collection (CDASH) and submission (SDTM) data sets.
  • Clinical Data Acquisition Standards Harmonization (CDASH) develops clinical research study content standards in collaboration with sixteen partner organizations including NCI. EVS maintains and distributes CDASH controlled terminology, a subset of SDTM, as part of NCIt. More information is available at CDISC's CDASH Web page.
  • Analysis Data Model (ADaM) supports efficient generation, replication, review and submission of analysis results from clinical trial data. EVS maintains and distributes ADaM controlled terminology as part of NCIt. More information is available at CDISC's ADaM Web page
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    .
  • Standard for Exchange of Non-Clinical Data (SEND) extends Study Data Tabulation Model (SDTM) for non-clinical studies. SEND guides the organization, structure and format of standard nonclinical tabulation data sets for interchange between organizations such as sponsors and CROs and for submission to a regulatory authority such as the FDA. NCI EVS maintains and distributes SEND controlled terminology as part of NCIt. It now includes some 1,000 additional terms beyond the SDTM terminology that is also part of the SEND standard. More information is available at CDISC's SEND Web page
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    .

The CDISC Shared Health and Research Electronic Library (SHARE) project aims to create a global, electronically accessible library of CDISC standard metadata that can be used to improve biomedical research and its link with healthcare. The SHARE metadata repository (MDR) provides a dynamic environment where the relationships between and among CDISC metadata and controlled terminologies are published at a level of granularity that is user-defined and in forms that are both human and machine readable. The SHARE MDR is built using CDISC and BRIDG metadata and terminology that is coded and maintained in the EVS NCIt environment. More information is available at CDISC’s SHARE Web page

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For more information, visit the NCI website CDISC terminology resources.

EVS Related References

  1. Anzai T, Kaminishi M, Sato K, Kaufman L, Iwata H, Nakae D.
    Responses to the Standard for Exchange of Nonclinical Data (SEND) in non-US countries.
    J Toxicol Pathol. 2015 Apr;28(2):57-64. doi: 10.1293/tox.2015-0007. Epub 2015 Apr 1. Review. PubMed PMID: 26028814; PubMed Central PMCID: PMC4444503. [PubMed][PDF
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  2. Elkin PL.
    Springer Terminology Related Standards Development.
    In Elkin PL, ed. Terminology and Terminological Systems, Ch.7 pp.107-123, Springer London, 2012. [Springer
    Multiexcerpt include
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    ]
  3. Haber MW, Kisler BW, Lenzen M, Wright LW.
    Controlled Terminology for Clinical Research: A Collaboration between CDISC and NCI Enterprise Vocabulary Services.
    Drug Information Journal 2007;41(3):405-412. [PDF
    Multiexcerpt include
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  4. Huser V, Sastry C, Breymaier M, Idriss A, Cimino JJ.
    Standardizing Data Exchange for Clinical Research Protocols and Case Report Forms: An Assessment of the Suitability of the Clinical Data Interchange Standards Consortium (CDISC) Operational Data Model (ODM).
    J Biomed Inform. 2015 Jul 15. pii: S1532-0464(15)00133-1. doi: 10.1016/j.jbi.2015.06.023. [Epub ahead of print] PubMed PMID: 26188274. [PubMed]
  5. Jiang G, Evans J, Oniki TA, Coyle JF, Bain L, Huff SM, Kush RD, Chute CG.
    Harmonization of detailed clinical models with clinical study data standards.
    Methods Inf Med. 2015;54(1):65-74. doi: 10.3414/ME13-02-0019. Epub 2014 Nov 26. PubMed PMID: 25426730. [PubMed]
  6. Jiang G, Solbrig HR, Iberson-Hurst D, Kush RD, Chute CG.
    A Collaborative Framework for Representation and Harmonization of Clinical Study Data Elements Using Semantic MediaWiki.
    AMIA Summits Transl Sci Proc. 2010 Mar 1;2010:11-5. PubMed PMID: 21347136; PubMed Central PMCID: PMC3041544. [PubMed]
  7. Kaufman L, Gore K, Zandee JC.
    Data Standardization, Pharmaceutical Drug Development, and the 3Rs.
    ILAR Journal. 2016 Dec 31;57(2):109-119.
  8. Keenan CM, Baker J, Bradley A, Goodman DG, Harada T, Herbert R, Kaufmann W, Kellner R, Mahler B, Meseck E, Nolte T, Rittinghausen S, Vahle J, Yoshizawa K.
    International Harmonization of Nomenclature and Diagnostic Criteria (INHAND): Progress to Date and Future Plans.
    Toxicol Pathol. 2014 Dec 21. pii: 0192623314560031. [Epub ahead of print] PubMed PMID: 25530274. [PubMed]
  9. Keenan CM, Goodman DG.
    Regulatory Forum Commentary: Through the Looking Glass--SENDing the Pathology Data We Have INHAND.
    Toxicol Pathol. 2014 July, 42(5):807-810. Epub 2013 Apr 18. PubMed PMID: 23599411. [PubMed]
  10. Kush RD.
    Interoperability for the Learning Health System.
    Digital Infrastructure for the Learning Health System: The Foundation for Continuous Improvement in Health and Health Care: Workshop Series Summary. Grossmann C, Powers B, McGinnis JM eds. Institute of Medicine (2011) pp.108-114. [Online
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  11. Leroux H, Lefort L.
    Semantic enrichment of longitudinal clinical study data using the CDISC standards and the semantic statistics vocabularies.
    J Biomed Semantics. 2015 Apr 9;6:16. doi: 10.1186/s13326-015-0012-6. eCollection 2015. PubMed PMID: 25973166; PubMed Central PMCID: PMC4429421. [PubMed]
  12. Perrone RD, Neville J, Chapman AB, Gitomer BY, Miskulin DC, Torres VE, Czerwiec FS, Dennis E, Kisler B, Kopko S, Krasa HB, LeRoy E, Castedo J, Schrier RW, Broadbent S.
    Therapeutic Area Data Standards for Autosomal Dominant Polycystic Kidney Disease: A Report From the Polycystic Kidney Disease Outcomes Consortium (PKDOC).
    Am J Kidney Dis. 2015 Jun 15. pii: S0272-6386(15)00758-1. doi: 10.1053/j.ajkd.2015.04.044. [Epub ahead of print] PubMed PMID: 26088508. [PubMed]
  13. Wood F.
    The Standard for the Exchange of Nonclinical Data (SEND): History, Basics, and Comparisons with Clinical Data.
    PharmaSUG 2016 Conference Proceedings. Denver, Colorado, May 8-11, 2016. [PDF
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Coalition for Accelerating Standards and Therapies (CFAST)

CFAST is a joint initiative of the Clinical Data Interchange Standards Consortium (CDISC) and the Critical Path Institute (C-Path), with steering committee participation from the US Food and Drug Administration (FDA), the National Cancer Institute Enterprise Vocabulary Services (NCI EVS) and TransCelerate BioPharma (TCB). Its purpose is to create therapeutic area-specific data standards to support clinical research in areas of particular importance to public health. Section XII of the Prescription Drug User Fee Act V (PDUFA V) provides the directive for FDA support for this Data Standards for Therapeutic Areas initiative. More information is available on the CFAST Web pages of CDISC

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and C-Path
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, and on the FDA Therapeutic Areas Web page.

Therapeutic area teams follow a CFAST-approved process that incorporates stakeholder inputs and public review to produce therapeutic area user guides, questionnaire supplements and controlled terminology. Controlled terminology goes through an extensive process of content development and public review before it is declared ready for release. All controlled terminology developed by the therapeutic area teams is published as part of the CDISC controlled terminology standards.

For more information on CDISC controlled terminology, visit the NCI website CDISC Terminology resources.

EVS Related References

  1. Haber MW, Kisler BW, Lenzen M, Wright LW.
    Controlled Terminology for Clinical Research: A Collaboration between CDISC and NCI Enterprise Vocabulary Services.
    Drug Information Journal 2007;41(3):405-412. [PDF
    Multiexcerpt include
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  2. U.S. Food and Drug Administration.
    FDA Therapeutic Area Standards (TAS) Initiative Project Plan, Version 2.0.
    June 2014. [PDF]

National Council of Prescription Drug Providers (NCPDP)

NCPDP is a not-for-profit, ANSI-accredited, Standards Development Organization with over 1,600 members representing virtually every sector of the pharmacy services industry. NCPDP creates and promotes the transfer of data related to medications, supplies, and services within the healthcare system through the development of standards and industry guidance. In 2009, NCPDP decided to partner with EVS to use NCIt subsets to support two of those standards, employed by some 200 vendors serving approximately 15,000 pharmacies nationwide:

  • NCPDP SCRIPT Standard supports messages for new prescriptions, prescription changes, refill requests, prescription fill status notification, prescription cancellation, medication history, and transactions for long term care environments. Many large providers such as First DataBank and Surescripts, the nation's largest e-prescriber, use this standard. Surescripts alone connects thousands of pharmacies across the US, and is connected to the largest network of payers and Medicaid Fee for Service payers nationwide.
  • NCPDP Telecommunication Standard supports the electronic communication of claims and other transactions between pharmacy providers, insurance carriers, third party administrators, and other responsible parties. It is the standard used for eligibility, claims processing, reporting and other pharmacy industry communications, as designated in HIPAA. More than 4 billion claims are processed each year using this standard.

For more information, visit the NCI website NCPDP Terminology resources.

EVS Related References

  1. Liu H, Burkhart Q, Bell DS.
    Evaluation of the NCPDP Structured and Codified Sig Format for e-prescriptions.
    J Am Med Inform Assoc. 2011 Sep 1;18(5):645-51.
  1. Epub
  1. 2011
  1. May
  1. 25.
  1. PubMed
  1. PMID:
  1. 21613642;
  1. PubMed
  1. Central
  1. PMCID:
  1. PMC3168301.
\
  1. [
[
  1. PubMed
|http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/21613642]\] h2. Federal Medication Terminologies
  1. ]

Federal Medication Terminologies (FMT)

Work

started

in

2002

as

an

interagency

collaboration

between

NCI

EVS,

FDA,

VHA,

and

NLM

--

joined

later

by

AHRQ,

CMS,

DoD,

and

EPA

--

to

improve

the

exchange

and

public

availability

of

medication

information

with

coordinated

development

of

terminology

standards.

The

initial

FMT

terminology

set

has

been

endorsed

by

U.S.

Federal

standards

efforts

including

the

National

Committee

on

Vital

and

Health

Statistics

(NCVHS),

Consolidated

Health

Informatics

(CHI),

the

Healthcare

Information

Technology

Standards

Panel

(HITSP),

and

the

Office

of

the

National

Coordinator

for

Health

Information

Technology

(ONC)

within

the

Department

of

Health

and

Human

Services

(HHS).

For

more

information, visit the NCI website [http://www.cancer.gov/cancertopics/cancerlibrary/terminologyresources/fmt|http://www.cancer.gov/cancertopics/cancerlibrary/terminologyresources/fmt]. h2. Veterans Health Administration (VHA) VHA has worked closely with EVS since 2002. Under an ongoing Memorandum of Understanding, VHA works with EVS on collaborative terminology policy and products, including content collaboration and publication of the VA's National Drug File Reference Terminology

information, visit the NCI Website Federal Medication Terminologies resources.

U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA)

EPA joined in the Federal Medication Terminologies (FMT) collaboration.  EPA has also developed an EPA Science Vocabulary that utilizes substantial content from NCI Thesaurus, particularly for definitions, in addition to content from numerous EPA glossaries and other documents, and from other terminologies such as the Human Disease Ontology.  It will be made publicly available in December 2014.

Veterans Health Administration (VHA)

VHA has worked closely with EVS since 2002. Under an ongoing Memorandum of Understanding, VHA works with EVS on collaborative terminology policy and products, including content collaboration and publication of the VA's National Drug File Reference Terminology (NDF-RT),

used

by

both

agencies

as

a

drug

information

reference

resource.

The

VHA

also

performed

a

thorough

comparison

of

the

functional

capabilities

of

LexEVS

to

those

of

other

terminology

servers.

The

VA

provided

the

results

to

the

VKC,

which

transformed

the

matrix

into

a

document

that

can

be

used

by

potential

adopters

of

LexEVS

as

they

evaluate

the

capabilities

of

the

system.

This

is

an

example

of

a

valuable

contribution

from

the

community

that

is

not

code-based;

in

an

open

source

model,

contributions

of

documentation

can

be

as

important

as

contributions

of

code.

h2.

Medical

Dictionary

for

Regulatory

Activities

(MedDRA)

MedDRA

is

an

international

terminology

for

coding

and

regulatory

reporting

of

drug

and

device

adverse

events.

MedDRA

is

an

International

Conference

on

Harmonisation

of

Technical

Requirements

for

Registration

of

Pharmaceuticals

for

Human

Use

(ICH)

standard,

adopted

by

FDA

and

many

other

agencies.

MedDRA

is

used

by

more

than

3,000

regulatory,

industry

and

academic

subscribers

from

60

countries,

and

has

been

translated

into

11

languages.

EVS

manages

the

MedDRA

license

for

NIH,

and

publishes

multiple

versions

through

LexEVS,

the

NCI

Term

Browser,

and

other

means.

EVS

maintains

multiple

versions

of

MedDRA

on

its

servers

and

browsers

to

support

validation

and

interpretation

of

data

encoded

with

those

versions.

Over

10

years,

EVS

has

performed

numerous

mapping

comparisons

between

MedDRA

and

NCI

terminologies

including

NCI

Thesaurus (NCIt),

PDQ,

CTEP

SDC,

and

CTCAE,

as

part

of

ongoing

efforts

to

promote

compatibility

and

data

translation

between

these

sources.

NCI

Metathesaurus

maintains

mappings

between

MedDRA

and

more

than

70

other

biomedical

terminologies,

providing

a

rich

source

of

additional

description

of

MedDRA

terms

and

supporting

data

translation

and

analysis.

EVS

and

the

[

MedDRA

Maintenance

and

Support

Services

Organization

(MSSO)

|http://www.meddramsso.com/] are working with the [UK Medicines and Healthcare products Regulatory Agency (MHRA)|http://www.mhra.gov.uk/] on use of the EVS Mapping Tool to develop an initial

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are working with the UK Medicines and Healthcare products Regulatory Agency (MHRA)
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on use of the EVS Mapping Tool to develop an initial proof-of-concept

mapping

from

SNOMED

CT

to

MedDRA,

focusing

on

high

frequency

adverse

event

terms

to

test

the

possibility

of

automated

conversion

of

EHR

data

to

support

more

proactive

identification

of

potential

signals

with

drugs that have gained marketing approval. EVS has also made numerous contributions to updates of MedDRA terminology. EVS conducted a comprehensive review of the over 8,500 terms in MedDRA's Neoplasm classification, suggesting changes initially presented to a special Blue Ribbon Panel meeting in 2011 with a follow-up Panel to be convened in 2012. NCI Thesaurus is used as the primary reference terminology for updates to MedDRA neoplastic terminology. h2. World Health Organization (WHO) The International Classification of Diseases (ICD) is the global standard diagnostic classification for all general epidemiological and many health management purposes, and has many clinical uses. WHO work on the International Classification of Diseases 11th revision (ICD-11) is using NCI Thesaurus (NCIt) as an important source of cancer-related terminology, relationships, and other features such as definitions. EVS has helped facilitate access to and reuse of NCIt content, as well as expert review and suggestions on some draft ICD-11 content; the oncology-specific ICD-O is also being influenced by NCIt's in-depth characterization of cancers and other neoplasms. WHO is also taking advantage of EVS-supported open source terminology tooling in its work. In June 2009, WHO requested a Classification Markup Language (ClaML) LexEVS data processing program that could be used to render ICD-10 in preparation for, and as the foundation of, ICD-11. Stanford University's Protégé and related terminology editing tools are also a vital component of WHO efforts. h2. Health Level 7 (HL7) EVS supports terminology content for the Regulated Clinical Research Information Management (RCRIM) committee of HL7, and for other committees as appropriate including Patient Safety, Pharmacy, Clinical Genomics, and the Clinical Interoperability Council. h2. The Taiwan Cancer Registry The Taiwan Cancer Registry, a population-based cancer registry founded in 1979, uses NCI Thesaurus terminology. Hospitals with greater than 50-bed capacity that provide outpatient and hospitalized cancer care are recruited to participate in reporting all newly diagnosed malignant neoplasms to this registry.{multi-excerpt}

 

 

 

...

drugs that have gained marketing approval.

EVS and the MSSO have worked with NICHD, FDA, and other partners in developing a specialized set of pediatric adverse event terminology for use in research and care, as a part of the larger Pediatric Terminology Subset in NCIt and also for inclusion and distribution as part of MedDRA. For more information, visit the NCI website pediatric terminology page.

EVS has made numerous contributions to updates of MedDRA terminology. EVS conducted a comprehensive review of the over 8,500 terms in MedDRA's Neoplasm classification, suggesting changes initially presented to a special Blue Ribbon Panel meeting in 2011. NCIt is used as the primary reference terminology for updates to MedDRA neoplastic terminology.  The MedDRA Browser now includes more than 10,000 link-outs to full-text term definitions in NCIt.

World Health Organization (WHO)

The International Classification of Diseases (ICD) is the global standard diagnostic classification for all general epidemiological and many health management purposes, and has many clinical uses. WHO work on the International Classification of Diseases 11th revision (ICD-11) is using NCI Thesaurus (NCIt) as an important source of cancer-related terminology, relationships, and other features such as definitions. EVS has helped facilitate access to and reuse of NCIt content, as well as expert review and suggestions on some draft ICD-11 content; the oncology-specific ICD-O is also being influenced by NCIt's in-depth characterization of cancers and other neoplasms.

WHO is also taking advantage of EVS-supported open source terminology tooling in its work. In June 2009, WHO requested a Classification Markup Language (ClaML) LexEVS data processing program that could be used to render ICD-10 in preparation for, and as the foundation of, ICD-11. Stanford University's Protégé and related terminology editing tools are also a vital component of WHO efforts.

Health Level 7 (HL7)

EVS supports terminology content for the Regulated Clinical Research Information Management (RCRIM) committee of HL7, and for other committees as appropriate including Patient Safety, Pharmacy, Clinical Genomics, and the Clinical Interoperability Council.

CareLex

CareLex™ (http://www.carelex.org/) is a publicly funded not-for-profit enterprise working to improve information interoperability in health sciences to accelerate delivery of new therapies to patients.  To achieve this, CareLex actively partners with the biopharmaceutical industry, researchers, contract research organizations (CROs), technology experts, allied professionals, and government regulators to develop and manage open source technologies and advance global standards for clinical trials data interoperability.

EVS has worked with CareLex since 2013 to help develop and publish terminology for their electronic Trial Master File (eTMF) Standards Initiative.  This terminology is maintained and distributed as part of NCI Thesaurus (NCIt), and can be found at http://evs.nci.nih.gov/ftp1/CareLex/About.html .

The Taiwan Cancer Registry

The Taiwan Cancer Registry, a population-based cancer registry founded in 1979, uses NCI Thesaurus terminology. Hospitals with greater than 50-bed capacity that provide outpatient and hospitalized cancer care are recruited to participate in reporting all newly diagnosed malignant neoplasms to this registry.

EVS Related References

  1. Chen S, Hsu C.
    The TCR Cancer Registry Repository for Annotating Cancer Data.
    Emergency Management and Management Sciences (ICEMMS), 2011 2nd IEEE International Conference on, 2011 Aug 8-10:297-300. [IEEE

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