Cerner
Cerner
Cerner
by Marsha Laird-Maddox; Susan B. Mitchell, MSN, RN; and Mark Hoffman, PhD
Abstract
As the adoption of electronic health records (EHRs) increases, more opportunities are available for
leveraging the system and the data to facilitate research. Historically, for patients enrolled in clinical
research trials or studies, data have been documented in the medical record, and then study-related data
are manually reentered into an electronic case report form in a research system. By utilizing data collected
in the EHR to prepopulate electronic case report forms, manual transcription is reduced, data quality is
improved, and the workflow for capturing research data is streamlined. Past efforts to integrate EHRs and
research systems for the purposes of data capture have demonstrated that interoperability is possible. This
article highlights how Cerner Corporation and Florida Hospital collaborated to extend an existing
standard to implement a workflow called Integrated Data Capture.
While not all study data are likely to be found in the EHRs clinical documentation, significant
overlap is possible. The RE-USE (Retrieving EHR Useful data for Secondary Exploitation) project
leveraged a semantic mapping process to match EHR data to elements of the electronic case report form
for research. This work found that 13.4 percent of the data needed in the electronic case report forms
could be directly mapped from data in the EHR.4, 5 A study conducted by Siemens and the Frauenklinik of
the Technical University of Munich found that between 48 percent and 69 percent of the electronic case
report form data could be prepopulated using their integrated EHRelectronic data capture solution.6
Murphy et al demonstrated an EHR system that included custom-built screens for capturing research-
related data, which were then extracted from the EHR database.7
A number of organizations have worked to address the challenge of EHR and research system
integration by proposing data, process, and technology standards. Integrating the Healthcare Enterprise
(IHE) and the Clinical Data Interchange Standards Consortium (CDISC) worked with multiple EHR and
electronic data capture vendors and pharmaceutical companies to develop the Retrieve Form for Data
Capture profile in 2007.8 Retrieve Form for Data Capture is a method for gathering data within a users
current application context to support the prepopulation of forms retrieved from an external source such
as an electronic data capture system.9 CDISC and IHE have hosted interoperability demonstrations
leveraging Retrieve Form for Data Capture since 2007.10 Cerner Corporation, Greenway Health,
Allscripts, and other EHR vendors have participated and demonstrated that data captured in the EHR
system can be electronically transmitted to data capture systems for research, prepopulating relevant data
elements.
Florida Hospital (Orlando, Florida), one of the countrys largest not-for-profit hospitals with a
widespread installation of the Cerner Millennium EHR, agreed to collaborate with Cerner to implement
the Retrieve Form for Data Capture workflow in a real-world environment. Cerner partnered with the
Translational Research Institute for Metabolism and Diabetes (TRI) at Florida Hospital to create a
streamlined system that integrates research data capture into a standard care workflow. A workflow based
on Retrieve Form for Data Capture was implemented to electronically transmit relevant participant data
captured in the Millennium EHR to the Cerner Discovere research data capture system. The TRI selected
an investigator-initiated, noninterventional diabetes study for the first Integrated Data Capture
implementation. Although the study is not subject to the same regulatory requirements as an
interventional study, the TRI aimed to design the system to meet the requirements of regulated research.
This article describes the implementation of research data capture integration at the TRI, features of the
integration, and how the system was designed and implemented to enhance the research process while
maintaining regulatory compliance.
The Systems
Millennium is the EHR system used by the Florida Hospital system and the TRI. In addition to the
core EHR capabilities, Millennium supports several workflows related to clinical research: study
management, enrollment tracking, trial screening, and recruitment. Clinicians can use Millennium to
easily identify patients who are in a study and to view relevant, research-related information such as study
documents and contact information for key study personnel. Millennium can promote protocol
compliance through the use of predefined order sets, facilitate research billing by delineating standard-of-
care versus research charges, and alert key study personnel to activity of study participants, such as a
participants being admitted to the hospital or being prescribed a contraindicated medication.
Discovere is the Cerner system designed for research data capture and is a separate, web-based
platform that can be used independently of Millennium. Discovere supports traditional electronic case
report form data capture, data management, participant surveys, patient-reported outcomes, and study
reporting.
Integrated Data Capture is the process that enables the electronic transmission of relevant data from
the Millennium EHR to Discovere (See Figure 1). Integrated Data Capture is an extension of the Retrieve
Form for Data Capture workflow.
Integrating Research Data Capture into the Electronic Health Record Workflow: Real-World Experience to Advance Innovation
Source Preservation
Values in the research system that were captured through Integrated Data Capture should not be
overwritten. In the first iteration of Integrated Data Capture, values displayed in the electronic case report
form could be overwritten via manual entry. This ability could reintroduce the risk of data transcription
error and put the electronic case report form out of sync with the source document (the EHR). The
Discovere system was enhanced so that values captured via Integrated Data Capture can only be edited
via a menu option that contains other values from the EHR (discussed in the next section).
Flexibility
A range of data must be available to be saved for research purposes. In the first iteration of Integrated
Data Capture, the most recently documented value for a field that mapped to an electronic case report
form field would be used. The most recently documented value for a particular item in the patient chart is
not necessarily the appropriate value to be saved in the electronic case report form. If multiple clinical
values, for example, multiple blood glucose values, are captured, the value captured specifically for
research purposes needs to be saved in the electronic case report form. Additionally, at times a set of data
4 Perspectives in Health Information Management, Fall 2014
is collected twice in the electronic case report form; for example, a set of vital signs may be repeated. To
ensure capture of the most appropriate value, the system was enhanced to receive a range of data from the
EHR. Once the electronic case report form is displayed, the user can filter the data available to a specific
date range. Although the most recent values for that range are populated in the mapped fields, the user can
select an earlier result to be saved to the research database. This option is crucial because manual entry is
not allowed.
The name of the user who documented the result in the EHR as well as the date and time of
documentation is displayed next to each result value, to aid in its selection. This feature can be especially
useful in an inpatient setting where, for example, vital signs are taken frequently and by multiple
clinicians. In these situations, the contextual metadata for the results help the researcher locate the result
most relevant to the research study, for example, the result captured by a research nurse.
Conclusion
This article describes an initial Retrieve Form for Data Captureinspired implementation of
Integrated Data Capture, followed by enhancements based on lessons learned. We deployed capabilities
such as increasing the data available for prepopulation, securing the prepopulated fields so that they could
only be modified with other EHR-supplied values, providing the user with notification that EHR data are
available, adding audit information, supporting repeated elements such as medications, and enabling data
to be populated as a group.
The success of Integrated Data Capture will be evaluated as the TRI and other research institutes at
Florida Hospital leverage the technology and process during future studies. Implementations such as the
one at the TRI can serve to inform and provide lessons learned for future iterations of standards and
regulatory guidance. For workflows such as Integrated Data Capture to gain broad acceptance, continued
collaboration is needed among researchers, industry, and regulatory organizations.
Acknowledgements
We would like to thank Jane Griffin, RPh, Lisa Kaspin, PhD, and Ginger Nedblake for their
contributions to this manuscript.
6 Perspectives in Health Information Management, Fall 2014
Notes
1. Jha, Ashish K., Matthew F. Burke, Catherine M. DesRoches, Maulik S. Joshi, Peter D.
Kralovec, Eric G. Campbell, and Melinda B. Buntin. Progress toward Meaningful Use:
Hospitals Adoption of Electronic Health Records. Journal of Managed Care 17, no. 12
(spec. no.) (2011): SP117SP124.
2. Bartlett, Michael, Suzanne Bishop, Catherine Celingant, Gary Drucker, Tricia Gregory,
Linda King, Susan Klimek, John Mestler, Brad Michel, Richard Perkins, Sharon Powell,
Christian Reich, and Selina Sibbald. The Future Vision of Electronic Health Records as
eSource for Clinical Research. eClinical Forum/PhRMA EDC/eSource Taskforce.
September 14, 2006. Available at
http://www.w3.org/wiki/images/2/21/HCLS$$ClinicalObservationsInteroperability$Futur
eEHR.pdf.
3. Ibid.
4. El Fadly, AbdenNaji, Bastien Rance, Nol Lucas, Charles Mead, Gilles Chatellier,
Pierre-Yves Lastic, Marie-Christine Jaulent, and Christel Daniel. Integrating Clinical
Research with the Healthcare Enterprise: From the RE-USE project to the EHR4CR
Platform. Journal of Biomedical Informatics 44, suppl. 1 (2011): S94S102.
5. El Fadly, AbdenNaji, Nol Lucas, Bastien Rance, Philippe Verplancke, Pierre-Yves
Lastic, and Christel Daniel. The REUSE Project: EHR as Single Datasource for
Biomedical Research. Studies in Health Technology and Informatics 160, pt. 2 (2010):
132428.
6. Zahlmann, Gudrun, Nicole Harzendorf, Ulrike Shwarz-Boeger, Stefan Paepke, Markus
Schmidt, Nadia Harbeck, and Marion Kiechle. EHR and EDC Integration in Reality.
Applied Clinical Trials Online. November 16, 2009. Available at
http://www.appliedclinicaltrialsonline.com/appliedclinicaltrials/article/articleDetail.jsp?id
=641682.
7. Murphy, Elizabeth C., Frederick L. Ferris III, and William R. ODonnell. An Electronic
Medical Records System for Clinical Research and the EMR-EDC Interface.
Investigative Ophthalmology & Visual Science 48, no. 10 (2007): 438389.
8. Clinical Data Interchange Standards Consortium. Healthcare Link Initiative. 2012.
Available at http://www.cdisc.org/healthcare-link.
9. IHE International, Inc. IHE IT Infrastructure Technical Framework Supplement:
Retrieve Form for Data Capture (RFD) Trial Implementation. August 19, 2011.
Available at
http://www.ihe.net/Technical_Framework/upload/IHE_ITI_Suppl_RFD_Rev2-
2_TI_2011-08-19.pdf.
10. Clinical Data Interchange Standards Consortium. Healthcare Link Initiative.
Integrating Research Data Capture into the Electronic Health Record Workflow: Real-World Experience to Advance Innovation
11. Health Level Seven International. HL7/ASTM Implementation Guide for CDA R2
Continuity of Care Document (CCD) Release 1. Available at
http://www.hl7.org/implement/standards/product_brief.cfm?product_id=6.
8 Perspectives in Health Information Management, Fall 2014
Figure 1
Connection between the Electronic Health Record and the Research System
Figure 2
CCD, Continuity of Care Document; EHR, electronic health record; IDC, Integrated Data
Capture.
10 Perspectives in Health Information Management, Fall 2014
Figure 3
Improved Workflow