Abstract
Biomedical terminology and vocabulary standards (for the purposes of this correspondence, we use the terms ‘terminology,’ ‘vocabulary’ and ‘ontology’ interchangeably.) play an important role in enabling consistent, comparable, and meaningful sharing of data within and across institutional boundaries, as well as ensuring semantic interoperability. An important domain for developing standardized vocabularies is medications, where existing standards structure and organize approved drug products and ingredients by various characteristics or properties to support a multitude of clinical and epidemiological research questions across the spectrum of health and disease. Veteran Affairs' National Drug File-Reference Terminology (NDF-RT; see figure 1) is a Federal Medication-recommended standardized terminology resource encompassing medications, ingredients, and high-level drug classes for Chemical Structure (eg, Acetanilides), Mechanism of Action (eg, Prostaglandin Receptor Antagonists), Physiological Effect (eg, Decreased Prostaglandin Production), drug–disease relationship describing the Therapeutic Intent (eg, Pain), and Pharmacokinetics describing the mechanisms of absorption and distribution of an administered drug within a body (eg, Hepatic Metabolism). Additionally, NDF-RT contains two independent lists of drug classes: Legacy VA classes and External Pharmacologic classes, where the former simply provides a shallow hierarchy of ‘clinically oriented’ classes …
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