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Analysis of institutional authors

Perez-Rey, DavidCorresponding AuthorGarcia-Remesal, MiguelAuthorCrespo, JoseAuthorMaojo, VictorAuthor

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June 9, 2019
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Article

CDAPubMed: a browser extension to retrieve EHR-based biomedical literature

Publicated to: BMC Medical Informatics and Decision Making. 12 (29): 29- - 2012-04-05 12(29), DOI: 10.1186/1472-6947-12-29

Authors:

Perez-Rey, David; Jimenez-Castellanos, Ana; Garcia-Remesal, Miguel; Crespo, Jose; Maojo, Victor
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Affiliations

Univ Politecn Madrid, Biomed Informat Grp, Fac Informat, Dept Inteligencia Artificial, E-28660 Madrid, Spain - Author

Abstract

Background: Over the last few decades, the ever-increasing output of scientific publications has led to new challenges to keep up to date with the literature. In the biomedical area, this growth has introduced new requirements for professionals, e. g., physicians, who have to locate the exact papers that they need for their clinical and research work amongst a huge number of publications. Against this backdrop, novel information retrieval methods are even more necessary. While web search engines are widespread in many areas, facilitating access to all kinds of information, additional tools are required to automatically link information retrieved from these engines to specific biomedical applications. In the case of clinical environments, this also means considering aspects such as patient data security and confidentiality or structured contents, e. g., electronic health records (EHRs). In this scenario, we have developed a new tool to facilitate query building to retrieve scientific literature related to EHRs. Results: We have developed CDAPubMed, an open-source web browser extension to integrate EHR features in biomedical literature retrieval approaches. Clinical users can use CDAPubMed to: (i) load patient clinical documents, i. e., EHRs based on the Health Level 7-Clinical Document Architecture Standard (HL7-CDA), (ii) identify relevant terms for scientific literature search in these documents, i. e., Medical Subject Headings (MeSH), automatically driven by the CDAPubMed configuration, which advanced users can optimize to adapt to each specific situation, and (iii) generate and launch literature search queries to a major search engine, i. e., PubMed, to retrieve citations related to the EHR under examination. Conclusions: CDAPubMed is a platform-independent tool designed to facilitate literature searching using keywords contained in specific EHRs. CDAPubMed is visually integrated, as an extension of a widespread web browser, within the standard PubMed interface. It has been tested on a public dataset of HL7-CDA documents, returning significantly fewer citations since queries are focused on characteristics identified within the EHR. For instance, compared with more than 200,000 citations retrieved by breast neoplasm, fewer than ten citations were retrieved when ten patient features were added using CDAPubMed. This is an open source tool that can be freely used for non-profit purposes and integrated with other existing systems.
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Keywords

ContextDocumentationElectronic health recordsInformation storage and retrievalInternetMedical subject headingsOntologyPeriodicals as topicPubmedSearchSoftware designSystems integration

Quality index

Bibliometric impact. Analysis of the contribution and dissemination channel

The work has been published in the journal BMC Medical Informatics and Decision Making due to its progression and the good impact it has achieved in recent years, according to the agency Scopus (SJR), it has become a reference in its field. In the year of publication of the work, 2012, it was in position , thus managing to position itself as a Q1 (Primer Cuartil), in the category Health Informatics. Notably, the journal is positioned above the 90th percentile.

Independientemente del impacto esperado determinado por el canal de difusión, es importante destacar el impacto real observado de la propia aportación.

Según las diferentes agencias de indexación, el número de citas acumuladas por esta publicación hasta la fecha 2026-04-28:

  • WoS: 8
  • Scopus: 11
  • Europe PMC: 3
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Impact and social visibility

From the perspective of influence or social adoption, and based on metrics associated with mentions and interactions provided by agencies specializing in calculating the so-called "Alternative or Social Metrics," we can highlight as of 2026-04-28:

  • The use, from an academic perspective evidenced by the Altmetric agency indicator referring to aggregations made by the personal bibliographic manager Mendeley, gives us a total of: 72.

With a more dissemination-oriented intent and targeting more general audiences, we can observe other more global scores such as:

  • The Total Score from Altmetric: 11.
  • The number of mentions on the social network X (formerly Twitter): 5 (Altmetric).

It is essential to present evidence supporting full alignment with institutional principles and guidelines on Open Science and the Conservation and Dissemination of Intellectual Heritage. A clear example of this is:

  • The work has been submitted to a journal whose editorial policy allows open Open Access publication.
  • Assignment of a Handle/URN as an identifier within the deposit in the Institutional Repository: https://oa.upm.es/16878/

As a result of the publication of the work in the institutional repository, statistical usage data has been obtained that reflects its impact. In terms of dissemination, we can state that, as of

  • Views: 400
  • Downloads: 248
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Leadership analysis of institutional authors

There is a significant leadership presence as some of the institution’s authors appear as the first or last signer, detailed as follows: First Author (PEREZ DEL REY, DAVID) and Last Author (MAOJO GARCIA, VICTOR MANUEL).

the author responsible for correspondence tasks has been PEREZ DEL REY, DAVID.

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Awards linked to the item

The present work has been funded, in part, by the European Commission through the INTEGRATE project (FP7-ICT-2009-6-270253), the EURECA project (FP7-ICT-2010-288048), the DICODE project (FP7-ICT-2009-5-257184), the Spanish Ministry of Health through the RETICS COMBIOMED network (RD07/0067/001) and the Comunidad de Madrid, Spain. The authors would also like to thank Carlos Lopez and Sergio Paraiso for collaborating in the development process, Rachel Elliot for her editorial assistance and Institute Jules Bordet, the Breast International Group, Philips Research and Universidade da Coruna for their participation on the evaluation of CDAPubMed.
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