An ontological foundation for ocular phenotypes and rare eye diseases

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  • Panagiotis I Sergouniotis
  • Emmanuel Maxime
  • Dorothée Leroux
  • Annie Olry
  • Rachel Thompson
  • Ana Rath
  • Peter N Robinson
  • Hélène Dollfus
  • ERN-EYE Ontology Study Group
  • Jane L Ashworth
  • Isabelle Audo
  • Vilma Jurate Balciuniene
  • Hamann, Steffen
  • Kessel, Line
  • Patrick Yu-Wai-Man
  • Ditta Zobor
  • Eberhart Zrenner

BACKGROUND: The optical accessibility of the eye and technological advances in ophthalmic diagnostics have put ophthalmology at the forefront of data-driven medicine. The focus of this study is rare eye disorders, a group of conditions whose clinical heterogeneity and geographic dispersion make data-driven, evidence-based practice particularly challenging. Inter-institutional collaboration and information sharing is crucial but the lack of standardised terminology poses an important barrier. Ontologies are computational tools that include sets of vocabulary terms arranged in hierarchical structures. They can be used to provide robust terminology standards and to enhance data interoperability. Here, we discuss the development of the ophthalmology-related component of two well-established biomedical ontologies, the Human Phenotype Ontology (HPO; includes signs, symptoms and investigation findings) and the Orphanet Rare Disease Ontology (ORDO; includes rare disease nomenclature/nosology).

METHODS: A variety of approaches were used including automated matching to existing resources and extensive manual curation. To achieve the latter, a study group including clinicians, patient representatives and ontology developers from 17 countries was formed. A broad range of terms was discussed and validated during a dedicated workshop attended by 60 members of the group.

RESULTS: A comprehensive, structured and well-defined set of terms has been agreed on including 1106 terms relating to ocular phenotypes (HPO) and 1202 terms relating to rare eye disease nomenclature (ORDO). These terms and their relevant annotations can be accessed in http://www.human-phenotype-ontology.org/ and http://www.orpha.net/ ; comments, corrections, suggestions and requests for new terms can be made through these websites. This is an ongoing, community-driven endeavour and both HPO and ORDO are regularly updated.

CONCLUSIONS: To our knowledge, this is the first effort of such scale to provide terminology standards for the rare eye disease community. We hope that this work will not only improve coding and standardise information exchange in clinical care and research, but also it will catalyse the transition to an evidence-based precision ophthalmology paradigm.

Original languageEnglish
Article number8
JournalOrphanet Journal of Rare Diseases
Volume14
Number of pages5
ISSN1750-1172
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 2019

    Research areas

  • Biological Ontologies, Computational Biology/methods, Evidence-Based Medicine, Eye Diseases/classification, Humans, Precision Medicine/methods, Rare Diseases/classification

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