Abstract

BackgroundMedical terminologies are commonly used in medicine. For instance, to answer a pharmacovigilance question, pharmacovigilance specialists (PVS) search in a pharmacovigilance database for reports in relation to a given drug. To do that, they first need to identify all MedDRA terms that might have been used to code an adverse reaction in the database, but terms may be numerous and difficult to select as they may belong to different parts of the hierarchy. In previous studies, three tools have been developed to help PVS identify and group all relevant MedDRA terms using three different approaches: forms, structured query-builder, and icons. Yet, a poor usability of the tools may increase PVS’ workload and reduce their performance. This study aims to evaluate, compare and improve the three tools during two rounds of formative usability evaluation.MethodsFirst, a cognitive walkthrough was performed. Based on the design recommendations obtained from this evaluation, designers made modifications to their tools to improve usability. Once this re-engineering phase completed, six PVS took part in a usability test: difficulties, errors and verbalizations during their interaction with the three tools were collected. Their satisfaction was measured through the System Usability Scale. The design recommendations issued from the tests were used to adapt the tools.ResultsAll tools had usability problems related to the lack of guidance in the graphical user interface (e.g., unintuitive labels). In two tools, the use of the SNOMED CT to find MedDRA terms hampered their use because French PVS were not used to it. For the most obvious and common terms, the icons-based interface would appear to be more useful. For the less frequently used MedDRA terms or those distributed in different parts of the hierarchy, the structured query-builder would be preferable thanks to its great power and flexibility. The form-based tool seems to be a compromise.ConclusionThese evaluations made it possible to identify the strengths of each tool but also their weaknesses to address them before further evaluation. Next step is to assess the acceptability of tools and the expressiveness of their results to help identify and group MedDRA terms.

Highlights

  • Medical terminologies are commonly used in medicine

  • Step is to assess the acceptability of tools and the expressiveness of their results to help identify and group Medical dictionary for drug regulatory activities (MedDRA) terms

  • It should be noted that some problems detected with the cognitive walkthrough (CW) method were not detected with the usability testing they had not been corrected: these usability problems did not really bother users when interacting with the tools and can be considered as false positives which diminish the validity of the results (defined by Sears (1997) as a “focus on issues that are relevant” [45]) of the CW

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Summary

Introduction

To answer a pharmacovigilance question, pharmacovigilance specialists (PVS) search in a pharmacovigilance database for reports in relation to a given drug. To do that, they first need to identify all MedDRA terms that might have been used to code an adverse reaction in the database, but terms may be numerous and difficult to select as they may belong to different parts of the hierarchy. Medical terminologies are commonly used today in medicine They are intended to implement semantic interoperability between the various information systems, and to support search in databases [1]. Few usability studies have been focused on the use of medical terminologies when querying clinical data. A particular case is the use of MedDRA (Medical Dictionary for Drug Regulatory Activities) by pharmacovigilance specialists (PVS)

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