Many disorders can occur in combination within the same patient. Guidance on the modeling and terming of FSNs for disorder combinations aims to achieve consistency. Clinically significant disorder combinations are represented in SNOMED CT by a single concept so that users can document temporal (timing) and causal (cause/effect) relationships between the conditions.
To express an association between conditions, one of the following associations is used:
Simple co-occurrence: two or more conditions have no direct causal or temporal relationship but are found together more often than by random chance
Causation 1: the cause is another finding or disorder, an event, or procedure
Causation 2: the cause is a physical force, physical object, organism, or substance
When considering disorder combinations two questions can be asked:
The following table provides the possible combinations of answers. It allows authors to assign combination disorders to a corresponding category below, to which the appropriate modeling and FSN construction is applied.
| Is there a stated causal relationship? | |||
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Yes, the cause is another finding or disorder, an event, or procedure. This is causation 1. | Yes, the cause is a physical object or force, organism, or substance. This is causation 2. | No | ||
What is the temporal relationship? | Not stated | X due to Y | X caused by Y | X and Y should be documented separately |
X follows Y | X due to and following Y | N/A | X after Y | |
X precedes Y | X before Y | N/A | X before Y | |
X occurs during Y | X due to and during Y | N/A | X during Y | |
X occurs before, during, and/or after Y | X due to and temporally related to Y | N/A | X temporally related to Y* | |
*Note: Temporally related to (attribute) and its subtypes Before and During are only approved to model perioperative complications and a limited number of other clinical findings. |
Simple Co-occurrence | |
Modeling pattern | Naming pattern |
Assign each condition as a supertype (or ensure that each participating disorder is present in the ancestor tree following classification) Use simple co-occurrence for two or more conditions that are strongly associated by means other than causality or a temporal relationship (e.g. a common predisposition) where representing such conditions as separate statements would result in a loss of the associated between the conditions For example,
Do not use simple co-occurrence for those disorders with more than one anatomical site or more than one associated morphology. Those disorders should rather be represented as individual concepts in a medical record. | FSN: X with Y |
Correct examples:
Incorrect examples not to be repeated:
| |
Be aware of conditions which likely exist prior to a disorder or procedure. For example, legacy term
|
Be aware of conditions which likely exist prior to a disorder or procedure. For example, legacy term
|
Causation 1 | |
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Cause is another finding, disorder, event, or procedure | |
Modeling pattern | Naming pattern |
For a condition caused by a clinical finding/disorder
For a condition caused by a procedure
For a condition caused by an event
| For conditions that are causal, or causal and co-occurring, construct the FSN with due to
For conditions specified as causal and temporal, construct the FSN with due to and the temporal relationship
|
Correct examples:
Incorrect examples not to be repeated:
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Determining causation only versus causation and co-occurrence There are no heuristics to standardize the determination of a precoordinated combination modeled using only the Due to relationship versus modeling the Due to relationship in addition to representing the causative condition in the supertypes. If both conditions must be present for the other to occur, both should be represented in the supertypes. Whether both conditions must be present concurrently is determined by an understanding of the disease process. Considerations include whether the conditions are chronic diseases, as these types of conditions will be ever present and thus require representation in the supertypes. If the causing condition resolves but the resultant condition can remain, then representation of both conditions in the supertypes is unwarranted. There are approximately 425 legacy concepts with 'co-occurrent and due to' in the description. Do not add new concepts with the terming 'co-occurrent and due to', instead use co-occurrence modeling (both conditions are represented in a supertype) in addition to the Due to (attribute) if warranted by the clinical condition. |
Causation 2 | |
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Causation 2 is when 1the cause is a material entity, and 2the means of exposure/introduction are not significant.
| |
Modeling pattern | Naming pattern |
Assign the caused disorder (X) as a supertype, or ensure that the caused disorder is a supertype following classification Assign the causal factor (Y) as the value of a Causative agent (attribute) | X caused by Y |
Correct example: Incorrect examples not to be repeated:
|
Temporal sequencing without causation | |
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Modeling pattern | Naming pattern |
Assign the condition or procedure that occurred first in the patient as the target of an After (attribute) relationship. Assign the condition that occurred second as a supertype (or ensure its presence in the ancestor tree). Examples:
The fat necrosis occurred first in the patient, so this concept will have an After (attribute) with a value of Fat necrosis (disorder). The calcinosis occurred secondarily, and thus Calcinosis (disorder) is a supertype of this concept.
The operative procedure occurred first in the patient, so this concept will have an After (attribute) with a value of Surgical procedure (procedure). The astigmatism occurred secondarily, so Astigmatism (disorder) is a supertype of this concept. | Where X occurs after Y:
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Not all disorders occurring in combination should be precoordinated into a single concept. Multiple clinical conditions should not be precoordinated in order to facilitate convenient recording in the medical record, even if the two conditions are often reported together.
For example,
In general, 47429007 |Associated with (attribute)| should be avoided due to the ambiguity which it conveys and the difficulty in applying this role consistently. Instead, Due to is used when there is a direct causal relationship between the conditions; otherwise, the clinical conditions should be recorded as separate concepts in the medical record.
There are a couple of exceptions when the use of 47429007 |Associated with (attribute)| is appropriate:
e.g. 6211002 |Polyarthritis associated with another disorder (disorder)| subsumes two children
201972000 |Allergic arthritis of multiple sites (disorder)| modeled with 42752001 |Due to (attribute)| of 419076005 |Allergic reaction (disorder)|
422565003 |Post-infective polyarthritis (disorder)| modeled with 255234002 |After (attribute)| of 40733004 |Infectious disease (disorder)|
It must be determined if a disorder is caused either by another disorder or by a material entity. A material entity is a concept found in Substance, Physical object, Pharmaceutical/biologic product, Physical force, or Organism subhierarchies. These subhierarchies are the current range constraints for the Causative agent (attribute) in the Clinical finding domain. For combined disorders where a cause can be either a disorder (eg, alcoholism) or a material entity (eg, alcohol):
Model as due to disorder if it is the indirect cause.
For example,
Model as caused by material entity if it is the direct cause.
For example,
In modeling concepts related to infectious diseases, a number of considerations need to be taken in to account.
2. Disorders can be modeled with |Due to|, with |After|, or with both |Due to| and |After| relationships to infectious diseases. If the focus disorder is itself an infectious disorder, it will also have a |Causative agent| relationship when the organism is specified.
For example,
|Causative agent| relationship: 721742004 |Otitis media caused by Streptococcus pneumoniae (disorder)|
|Due to| relationship: 698733009 |Intestinal obstruction due to tuberculosis (disorder)|
|Due to| and |Causative agent| relationship: 866044006 |Mycosis due to human immunodeficiency virus infection (disorder)|
|After| relationship: 182961000119101 |Acute disseminated encephalomyelitis following infectious disease (disorder)|
|After| and |Causative agent| relationship: 4740000 |Herpes zoster (disorder)|
|Due to| and |After| relationship: 1148594002 |Chronic arthritis due to and following rheumatic fever (disorder)|
Applying the |Due to|, |After|, or both |Due to| and |After| relationships to a concept will not lead to it being a subtype of |Infectious disease (disorder)| unless it is itself an infectious disease. |
Generally, when |Causative agent| is used in the concept's modeling, the terming 'caused by' is used in the FSN. Similarly, when |Due to| is used in the concept's modeling, the terming 'due to' is used in the FSN. In some situations, both the |Causative agent| and |Due to| are used in a concept's model, and so the naming may vary based on the situation.
In some cases, the DUE TO takes precedence because of a relationship between the causative agent and the DUE TO disorder.
For example,
288021000119107 |Disorder due to alcohol abuse (disorder)|
Stated form of |Disorder due to alcohol abuse (disorder)| |
In other cases, the DUE TO relationship is used as a means to classify the concept appropriately while the CAUSATIVE AGENT takes precedence.
For example,
1251395000 |Injury of skin caused by class Anthozoa (disorder)|
Inferred form of |Injury of skin caused by class Anthozoa (disorder)| |
In this case, the DUE TO represents the "injury" part of the concept and allows classification as a traumatic injury. An alternative, but less appealing FSN would have been "Disorder of skin due to traumatic injury caused by class Anthoza". So, if the concept FSN specifies a disorder causally associated with another disorder, then use "due to" in the FSN; if the FSN specifies a disorder causally associated with an "agent" (organism, physical object, substance, etc.), then use "caused by" in the FSN.
Exceptions may exist to the above guidance which requires review on a case-by-case basis.
The FSN submitted by a requestor may be used as preferred term even if it does not comply with the above recommended pattern. However, do not use phrases such as secondary to, as a result of, etc. in lieu of due to.
Rather than the naming conventions described above, use the names that are accepted clinical parlance and that represent specific pathophysiologic entities for some combined disorders, as the preferred term.
The stricter rules for FSN construction do not prevent the addition of more familiar connectives in other descriptions, for example with, or associated with.
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(See also, Appendix, Concept Models: Disorder Combinations)