BFO and Disease Barry Smith Milan September 4
BFO and Disease Barry Smith Milan, September 4, 2009 1
BFO A simple top-level ontology to support information integration in scientific research No abstracta Nothing propositional No overlap with domain ontologies (for society, for information, …) – built by populating downwards 2
Blinding Flash of the Obvious Continuant Independent Continuant Occurrent (Process, Event) Dependent Continuant http: //ifomis. uni-saarland. de/bfo/ 3
DOLCE taxonomy PT Particular ED Endurant PED Physical Endurant M Amount of Matter APO Agentive Physical Object F Feature POB Physical Object NAPO Non-agentive Physical Object PD Perdurant NPED Non-physical Endurant MOB Mental Object STV Stative TQ Temporal Quality ACH Achievement ACC Accomplishment ST State PRO Process … … SOB Social Object ASO Agentive Social Object SAG Social Agent EV Event AS Arbitrary Sum … NPOB Non-physical Object Q Quality NASO Non-agentive Social Object SC Society TL … Temporal Location PQ Physical Quality SL … Spatial Location AB Abstract AQ Abstract Quality … … Fact TR Temporal Region …T Time Interval Set PR Physical Region …S Space Region R Region AR Abstract Region …
DOLCE taxonomy PT Particular ED Endurant PED Physical Endurant M Amount of Matter APO Agentive Physical Object F Feature POB Physical Object NAPO Non-agentive Physical Object PD Perdurant NPED Non-physical Endurant MOB Mental Object STV Stative TQ Temporal Quality ACH Achievement ACC Accomplishment ST State PRO Process … … SOB Social Object ASO Agentive Social Object SAG Social Agent EV Event AS Arbitrary Sum … NPOB Non-physical Object Q Quality NASO Non-agentive Social Object SC Society TL … Temporal Location PQ Physical Quality SL … Spatial Location AB Abstract AQ Abstract Quality … … Fact TR Temporal Region …T Time Interval Set PR Physical Region …S Space Region R Region AR Abstract Region …
Example: The Cell Ontology
Benefits of coordination No need to reinvent the wheel Can profit from lessons learned through mistakes made by others Can more easily reuse what is made by others Can more easily inspect and criticize results of others’ work (PATO) Leads to innovations (e. g. Mireot) in strategies for combining ontologies 7
Users of BFO NCI Biomed. GT SNOMED CT Ontology for General Medical Science (OGMS) ACGT Clinical Genomics Trials on Cancer – Master Ontology / Formbuilder (Case Report Forms for Cancer Clinical Trials) 8
Users of BFO Medi. Cognos / Microsoft Healthvault Cleveland Clinic Semantic Database in Cardiothoracic Surgery Major Histocompatibility Complex (MHC) Ontology (NIAID) Neuroscience Information Framework Standard (NIFSTD) and Constituent Ontologies 9
Users of BFO Interdisciplinary Prostate Ontology (IPO) Nanoparticle Ontology (NPO): Ontology for Cancer Nanotechnology Research Neural Electromagnetic Ontologies (NEMO) Chem. Axiom – Ontology for Chemistry Ontology for Risks Against Patient Safety (RAPS/REMINE) (EU FP 7) IDO Infectious Disease Ontology (NIAID) 10
IDO Consortium • MITRE, Mount Sinai, UTSouthwestern – Influenza • IMBB/Vector. Base – Vector borne diseases (A. gambiae, A. aegypti, I. scapularis, C. pipiens, P. humanus) • Colorado State University – Dengue Fever • Duke University – Tuberculosis, Staph. aureus • Case Western Reserve – Infective Endocarditis • University of Michigan – Brucilosis 11
RELATION TO TIME GRANULARITY CONTINUANT INDEPENDENT ORGAN AND ORGANISM Organism (NCBI Taxonomy) CELL AND CELLULAR COMPONENT Cell (CL) MOLECULE OCCURRENT DEPENDENT Anatomical Organ Entity Function (FMA, (FMP, CPRO) Phenotypic CARO) Biological Process Quality (GO) (Pa. TO) Cellular Component Function (FMA, GO) (GO) Molecule (Ch. EBI, SO, Rna. O, Pr. O) Molecular Function (GO) Molecular Process (GO) The Open Biomedical Ontologies (OBO) Foundry 12
The OBO Foundry Initial Candidate Members – GO Gene Ontology – CL Cell Ontology – SO Sequence Ontology – Ch. EBI Chemical Ontology – PATO Phenotype (Quality) Ontology – FMA Foundational Model of Anatomy – Ch. EBI Chemical Entities of Biological Interest – CARO Common Anatomy Reference Ontology – PRO Protein Ontology 13
The OBO Foundry Under development – Disease Ontology – Infectious Disease Ontology – Mammalian Phenotype Ontology – Plant Trait Ontology – Environment Ontology – Ontology for Biomedical Investigations – Behavior Ontology – RNA Ontology 14
RELATION TO TIME CONTINUANT INDEPENDENT GRANULARITY ORGAN AND ORGANISM CELL AND CELLULAR COMPONENT MOLECULE Family, Community, Deme, Population Organism (FMA, (NCBI CARO) Taxonomy) Cell (CL) Cell Component (FMA, GO) Molecule (Ch. EBI, SO, Rna. O, Pr. O) DEPENDENT ENVIRONMENT COMPLEX OF ORGANISMS OCCURRENT Organ Function (FMP, CPRO) Population Phenotype Population Process Phenotypic Quality (Pa. TO) Biological Process (GO) Cellular Function (GO) Molecular Process (GO) 15
RELATION TO TIME GRANULARITY INDEPENDENT ORGAN AND ORGANISM Organism (NCBI Taxonomy) CELL AND CELLULAR COMPONENT Cell (CL) MOLECULE CONTINUANT DEPENDENT Anatomical Organ Entity Function (FMA, (FMP, CPRO) Phenotypic CARO) Quality (Pa. TO) Cellular Component Function (FMA, GO) (GO) Molecule (Ch. EBI, SO, RNAO, PRO) OCCURRENT Molecular Function (GO) Organism-Level Process (GO) Cellular Process (GO) Molecular Process (GO) rationale of OBO Foundry coverage (homesteading principle) 16
OBO Foundry organized in terms of Basic Formal Ontology Each Foundry ontology can be seen as an extension of a single upper level ontology (BFO) 17
BFO and the 3 Gene Ontologies (GO) Continuant Occurrent biological process Independent Continuant cell component Dependent Continuant molecular function Kumar A. , Smith B, Borgelt C. Dependence relationships between Gene Ontology terms based on TIGR gene product annotations. Compu. Term 2004, 31 -38. Bada M, Hunter L. Enrichment of OBO Ontologies. J Biomed Inform. 2006 Jul 26 18
Continuant Independent Continuant Dependent Continuant Non-realizable Dependent Continuant (quality) . . . Realizable Dependent Continuant (function, role, disposition) . . . 19
Realizable dependent continuants plan function role disposition capability tendency continuants 20
Their realizations execution expression exercise realization application course occurrents 21
Continuant Independent Continuant Dependent Continuant Non-realizable Dependent Continuant (quality) . . . Realizable Dependent Continuant (function, role, disposition) . . . 22
realization depends_on realizable Continuant Independent Continuant Dependent Continuant bearer disposition . . Occurrent Process of realization . . . . 23
Specific Dependence on the instance level a depends_on b =def. a is necessarily such that if b ceases to exist than a ceases to exist on the type level A specifically_depends_on B =def. for every instance a of A, there is some instance b of B such that a depends_on b. 24
depends_on Continuant Independent Continuant Dependent Continuant thing quality . . Occurrent process, event temperature depends on bearer . . . . 25
Specifically dependent continuants • the quality of whiteness of this cheese • your role as lecturer • the disposition of this patient to experience diarrhea 26
the universal red instantiates the universal eye instantiates the particular case an instance of an depends_on of redness (of a eye (in a particular fly eye) fly) 27
color is_a red instantiates anatomical structure is_a eye instantiates the particular case an instance of an depends on of redness (of a eye (in a particular fly eye) fly) 28
depends_on Continuant Occurrent process Independent Continuant Dependent Continuant thing quality . . temperature depends on bearer . . . . 29
Specifically Dependent Continuants Specifically Dependent Continuant if the bearer ceases to exist, then its quality, function, role ceases to exist the color of my skin Quality, Pattern Realizable Dependent Continuant the function of my heart to pump blood my weight 30
Generically Dependent Continuants if one bearer ceases to exist, then the entity can survive, because there are other bearers Generically Dependent Continuant (copyability) the pdf file on my laptop the DNA (sequence) in this chromosome Information Object Gene Sequence 31
Four distinct classificatory tasks 1. 2. 3. 4. of people (patients, carriers, …) of diseases (cases, instances, problems, …) of courses of disease (symptoms, treatments…) of representations (records, observations, data, diagnoses…) ICD confuses 1. & 2. HL 7, most standard terminologies, confuse 2. and 4 32
Four distinct BFO categories 1. person (patient, carrier, …) – independent continuant 2. disease (case, instance, problem, …) – specifically dependent continuant 3. course of disease (symptom, treatment…) – occurrent 4. representation (record, datum, diagnosis…) – generically dependent continuant 33
Four distinct BFO categories 1. people (patients, carriers, …) – independent continuants 2. disease (case, instance, problem, condition …) – disposition 3. course of disease (symptom, episode, outbreak …) – realization of dispositions 4. representations (records, data, diagnoses…) – generically dependent continuants 34
Disposition Internally-Grounded Realizable Entity A disposition is a realizable entity which is such that, if it ceases to exist, then its bearer is physically changed, whose realization occurs, in virtue of the bearer’s physical make-up, when this bearer is in some special physical circumstances 35
Disorder 1. person – independent continuant objects fiat object part object aggregate 36
Disorder A fiat object part of an organism which serves as the bearer of a disposition of a certain sort This fiat object may have no determinate boundaries (compare: Downtown Santa Barbara) 37
Where does Mount Everest begin and end? Cf. Barry Smith and David M. Mark, “Do Mountains Exist? ”, Environment and Planning B, 30, 2003. 38
Big Picture (with thanks to Richard Scheuermann) 39
A disease is a disposition rooted in a physical disorder in the organism and realized in pathological processes. produces etiological process bears disorder realized_in disposition pathological process produces diagnosis interpretive process produces signs & symptoms used_in abnormal bodily features recognized_as 40
Elucidation of Primitive Terms l l l ‘bodily feature’ - an abbreviation for a physical component, a bodily quality, or a bodily process. disposition - an attribute describing the propensity to initiate certain specific sorts of processes when certain conditions are satisfied. clinically abnormal - some bodily feature that l l l (1) is not part of the life plan for an organism of the relevant type (unlike aging or pregnancy), (2) is causally linked to an elevated risk either of pain or other feelings of illness, or of death or dysfunction, and (3) is such that the elevated risk exceeds a certain threshold level. * *Compare: baldness 41
Definitions - Foundational Terms l Disorder =def. – A causally linked combination of physical components that is clinically abnormal. l Pathological Process =def. – A bodily process that is a manifestation of a disorder and is clinically abnormal. l Disease =def. – A disposition (i) to undergo pathological processes that (ii) exists in an organism because of one or more disorders in that organism. 42
Dispositions and Predispositions l l All diseases are dispositions; not all dispositions are diseases. A predisposition is a disposition. Predisposition to Disease of Type X =def. – A disposition in an organism that constitutes an increased risk of the organism’s subsequently developing the disease X. HNPCC is caused by a l disorder (mutation) in a DNA mismatch repair gene that l disposes to the acquisition of additional mutations from defective DNA repair processes, and thus is a l predisposition to the development of colon cancer. 43
Definitions - Clinical Evaluation Terms l l Sign =def. – A bodily feature of a patient that is observed in a physical examination and is deemed by the clinician to be of clinical significance. (Objectively observable features) Symptom =def. – A experienced bodily feature of a patient that is observed by and observable only by the patient and is of the type that can be hypothesized by a patient to be a realization of a disease. (A restricted family of phenomena including pain, nausea, anger, drowsiness, which are of their nature experienced in the first person) Symptoms are subjective. But this does not mean that there is no objective fact of the matter whether a given symptom exists 44
Cirrhosis - environmental exposure l l l l Etiological process - phenobarbitolinduced hepatic cell death l produces Disorder - necrotic liver l bears Disposition (disease) - cirrhosis l realized_in Pathological process - abnormal tissue repair with cell proliferation and fibrosis that exceed a certain threshold; hypoxia-induced cell death l produces Abnormal bodily features l recognized_as Symptoms - fatigue, anorexia Signs - jaundice, splenomegaly l l l l Symptoms & Signs l used_in Interpretive process l produces Hypothesis - rule out cirrhosis l suggests Laboratory tests l produces Test results - elevated liver enzymes in serum l used_in Interpretive process l produces Result - diagnosis that patient X has a disorder that bears the disease cirrhosis 45
Influenza - infectious l l l l Etiological process - infection of airway epithelial cells with influenza virus l produces Disorder - viable cells with influenza virus l bears Disposition (disease) - flu l realized_in Pathological process - acute inflammation l produces Abnormal bodily features l recognized_as Symptoms - weakness, dizziness Signs - fever l l l l Symptoms & Signs l used_in Interpretive process l produces Hypothesis - rule out influenza l suggests Laboratory tests l produces Test results - elevated serum antibody titers l used_in Interpretive process l produces Result - diagnosis that patient X has a disorder that bears the disease flu But the disorder also induces normal physiological processes (immune response) that can results in the elimination of the 46 disorder (transient disease course).
Huntington’s Disease - genetic l l l l Etiological process - inheritance of >39 CAG repeats in the HTT gene l produces Disorder - chromosome 4 with abnormal m. HTT l bears Disposition (disease) - Huntington’s disease l realized_in Pathological process - accumulation of m. HTT protein fragments, abnormal transcription regulation, neuronal cell death in striatum l produces Abnormal bodily features l recognized_as Symptoms - anxiety, depression Signs - difficulties in speaking and swallowing l l l l Symptoms & Signs l used_in Interpretive process l produces Hypothesis - rule out Huntington’s l suggests Laboratory tests l produces Test results - molecular detection of the HTT gene with >39 CAG repeats l used_in Interpretive process l produces Result - diagnosis that patient X has a disorder that bears the disease Huntington’s disease 47
HNPCC - genetic pre-disposition l l l l Etiological process - inheritance of a mutant mismatch repair gene l produces Disorder - chromosome 3 with abnormal h. MLH 1 l bears Disposition (disease) - Lynch syndrome l realized_in Pathological process - abnormal repair of DNA mismatches l produces Disorder - mutations in proto-oncogenes and tumor suppressor genes with microsatellite repeats (e. g. TGF-beta R 2) l bears Disposition (disease) - non-polyposis colon cancer l realized in Symptoms (including pain) 48
Definition: Etiology l Etiological Process =def. – A process in an organism that leads to a subsequent disorder. l Example: toxic chemical exposure resulting in a mutation in the genomic DNA of a cell; infection of a human with a pathogenic virus; inheritance of two defective copies of a metabolic gene l The etiological process creates the physical basis of that disposition to pathological processes which is the disease. 49
Definitions - Diagnosis l Clinical Picture =def. – A representation of a clinical phenotype that is inferred from the combination of laboratory, image and clinical findings about a given patient. l Diagnosis =def. – A conclusion of an interpretive process that has as input a clinical picture of a given patient and as output an assertion to the effect that the patient has a disease of such and such a type. 50
Definitions - Qualities l Manifestation of a Disease =def. – A bodily feature of a patient that is (a) a deviation from clinical normality that exists in virtue of the realization of a disease and (b) is observable. l l l Observability includes observable through elicitation of response or through the use of special instruments. Preclinical Manifestation of a Disease =def. – A manifestation of a disease that exists prior to its becoming detectable in a clinical history taking or physical examination. Clinical Manifestation of a Disease =def. – A manifestation of a disease that is detectable in a clinical history taking or physical examination. Phenotype =def. – A (combination of) bodily feature(s) of an organism determined by the interaction of its genetic make-up and environment. Clinical Phenotype =def. – A clinically abnormal phenotype. 51
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