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1. Introduction

Inconsistencies in the modeling of concepts related to the congenital absence of all or part of a body structure have been reported to SNOMED International.  The issue appears to stem from the origin of these terms from ICD-9 and ICD-10.  In the ICD classifications, the majority of these terms are classified as “Agenesis, aplasia or hypoplasia of X", and includes index terms "Congenital absence of X" - (Absence (of) (organ or part) (complete or partial)"), and “Agenesis of X".  This is probably the reason that many of the current “Congenital absence of X’ terms include a description of “Agenesis of X”, which is more specific than the overall meaning of the term. While most pediatric professionals use the term "Congenital limb deficiencies", in order to differentiate between longitudinal or transverse and complete vs partial absence, ICD-10 continued to use the term Congenital absence to represent all anomalies of development.  ICD-11 appears to have adopted a more specific approach, using the term "reduction deformities" for limb deficiencies, but still retained some of the older synonymy (e.g. Congenital absence of gallbladder is synonymous to LB20.10 Agenesis, aplasia or hypoplasia of gallbladder).  Many of the terms in question have been in SNOMED CT since the first release, so should be interpreted with that origin in mind. Revisions to the original proposal in red.

E.G.


2. Problem statement

Given the purported history of the origin of this issue, what is it that SNOMED CT means when the FSN says "Congenital absence"?

A number of concepts in this domain were remodeled in 2017 as part of the QI project to represent the notion of complete absence (i.e. agenesis), where this additional synonym was present.  This has lead to an inconsistent representation of "Congenital absence" which was based on the presence or absence of a description that did not necessarily represent the original meaning of the concept.  If the synonym was not present on a concept, then the term was modeled simply as "absence".

According to a number of sources, clinical use of "congenital absence" can represent at least three different classes of absence:

  1. Total developmental absence of the affected organ/structure
  2. Partial absence of the affected organ/structure
  3. In utero amputation of all or part of the affected organ/structure. (e.g., 765206003 |Constriction ring syndrome (disorder)|

Clinically, many professional organizations use the term “Congenital absence” to represent the full range of absences of all or part of a specific body structure.  See:  https://www.cdc.gov/ncbddd/birthdefects/surveillancemanual/chapters/chapter-4/chapter4-5.html

As noted in the discussion comments, the conventional use of the terms "Aplasia" and "Agenesis" often regard these as synonymous.  However, proper definitions of these terms suggests a distinction that should be made in the terminology when included in the FSN.

  • Aplasia -  Defective development resulting in the absence of all or part of an organ or tissue.
  • Agenesis - Absence of an organ due to nonappearance of its primordium in the embryo. (implies complete absence)

Initial proposed guidance resulted in a realignment of the morphologies used in modeling these concepts to the following hierarchy:

418560003 |Absence (morphologic abnormality)|

     45486003 |Aplasia (morphologic abnormality)|

          782173000 |Agenesis (morphologic abnormality)|

It was found that by assigning the finding site of all aplasia concepts to "Part of X", incorrect subsumption occurred as Agenesis concepts did not classify correctly under Aplasia concepts of the same body structure, violating the definition of Aplasia as "all or part of".  Thus, the following revision to the original proposed modeling guidance is submitted. 

In order to conform to the intended meaning of the FSNs as described by the original source, the following modeling patterns are proposed for Congenital absence terms:

3. Congenital absence remodel proposal

3.1. FSNs that specify “Congenital absence of X” (231 concepts) will be modeled using:

ASSOCIATED MORPHOLOGY = 418560003 |Absence (morphologic abnormality)|

OCCURRENCE = 255399007 |Congenital (qualifier value)|

FINDING SITE = “Structure of X”

3.2. FSNs that specify “Aplasia” (92 concepts) 

ASSOCIATED MORPHOLOGY = 45486003 |Aplasia (morphologic abnormality)|or 890175002 |Transverse deficiency (morphologic abnormality)|

OCCURRENCE = 255399007 |Congenital (qualifier value)|

FINDING SITE = “Structure of X”

PATHOLOGICAL PROCESS = "Pathological development process"

3.3. FSNs that specify "Partial absence of X" (5 concepts) will be modeled using: 

ASSOCIATED MORPHOLOGY = 45486003 |Aplasia (morphologic abnormality)|or 890175002 |Transverse deficiency (morphologic abnormality)|

OCCURRENCE = 255399007 |Congenital (qualifier value)|

FINDING SITE = “Part of X”

PATHOLOGICAL PROCESS = "Pathological development process"

3.4. FSNs that specify “Agenesis of X” (85 concepts) or "Complete absence of X" (2 concepts) will be modeled using: 

ASSOCIATED MORPHOLOGY = 782173000 |Agenesis (morphologic abnormality)|

OCCURRENCE = 255399007 |Congenital (qualifier value)|

FINDING SITE = “Entire X” 

PATHOLOGICAL PROCESS = "Pathological development process"

3.5. Additional concepts that use the ASSOCIATED MORPHOLOGY = 24216005 |Congenital absence (morphologic abnormality)| will have the value replaced with 418560003 |Absence (morphologic abnormality)| and an additional OCCURRENCE relationship added, if necessary. 24216005 |Congenital absence (morphologic abnormality)| shall no longer be used to model new content and will be inactivated when all existing occurrences of its use are replaced.

3.6.  Congenital absence of X concepts that contain and additional description of “Agenesis of X” will have the synonym inactivated and pointed to either a new or existing concept representing “Agenesis of X”.

3.7.  Longitudinal limb reduction deformities will be reassigned parent of 22841008 |Phocomelia (disorder)|, where appropriate.

4. Alternative proposal

The inherent ambiguity in the use of the term "Absence" should warrant consideration of replacement with a more specific FSN.  This would allow for a more general representation of limb deficiencies as groupers for the more specific partial or complete absences of structures.  This might be disruptive due to the wide use of the term "Congenital absence" for the full spectrum of body structure deficiencies. Alignment with some of the  more recent limb deficiency classifications may be useful.   



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7 Comments

  1. Agree with the proposed re-modelling, but would note that effectively deprecating:

    116676008|Associated morphology|=24216005|Congenital absence (morphologic abnormality)| 

    ...as a pattern looks set to introduce a new inconsistency in respect of all the other current descendants of <<21390004 Developmental abnormality

    The proposed alternative modelling pattern:

    116676008|Associated morphology|=418560003|Absence|,
    246454002|Occurrence|=255399007|Congenital|

    ..would mean that none of the remodelled concepts would be subsumed under 276654001Congenital malformation, because 418560003 Absence is not subsumed by 21390004 Developmental abnormality; obviously, not all absences are necessarily congenitally present.

    I suspect trying to fix this error could therefore inexorably reverse you into a reworking of how all congenital and developmental pathology is represented. That might be long overdue, but you might not want to tackle it now.

    1. Jeremy Rogers,

      Much delayed in response to your comment here, but it has been the intent of the QI project to rework this area as you suggest. 21390004 |Developmental anomaly (morphologic abnormality)| is slated for inactivation in favor of the proposed modeling pattern.  276654001 |Congenital malformation (disorder)| itself has been remodeled according to this pattern and does subsume all (most) of the same content as before.  We are going through each of the subtypes of developmental anomaly to correct the modeling.  We are developing templates and normalization processes that facilitate the rework, but yes, it is a load.


  2. Two thoughts about "aplasia":

    1. A simple definition from Stedman's is "defective development or congenital absence of an organ or tissue", which suggests to me whole or partial. So should the Finding Site be = "Structure of X" rather than “Part of X”?  And, currently there are a number of "aplasia of X" concepts which are the parent of "congenital absence of X". We may want to think about how those relationships play out.  Or, have I missed something?
    2. Obviously, the rule does not apply the hematologic disorders where aplasia does not automatically mean congenital.
    1. Thanks Jeff. You reminded me of a nagging doubt I also now remember having; I think "aplasia" is indeed an ambiguous clinical term, as that Stedman definition now makes explicit. To many clinicians, when used to characterise the in utero genesis of macroscopic body structures, its assumed to mean complete failure, and so possibly becomes synonymous with agenesis. Is it actually possible to have "partial" agenesis, or is that more correctly a specialisation of dysgenesis. But if some other possible uses of 'aplasia' would be more in the context of merely defective rather than totally absent development, then we're sunk.

      So we're possibly in familiar territory here, in which we can construct unambiguous modelled representations of the phenomena that exist to be represented... but there is in some uncertainty about how these then best match up to the familiar set of clinical jargon labels in daily use. What is  the difference between "developmental aplasia" and "agenesis", or between dysplasia and dysgenesis, in the context of congenital anatomical deformation? Which can be in any meaningful sense be specialised as 'partial' ? If all of them can in fact be partial, do we need an explicit additional "extent" property as an additional modelled relationship, so that we can be completely unambiguous on that point?

      Ultimately, 

      defective or complete failure of organ genesis (agenesis) affecting the entire organ and not only some subpart thereof

      still isn't quite the same as

      complete failure of organ genesis affecting the entire organ and not only some subpart thereof

      ...which would I think be required to capture true "agenesis". 

      1. I certainly agree with teasing the "congenital" out of the morphology and using occurrence. (and not just this morphology (smile))
        Perhaps even extending to just having "absence" as the morphology, and using other attributes ("Pathological process"/"Due to") to distinguish aplasia/agenisis/etc...

        As it seems like these words "Agenesis, aplasia or hypoplasia" are frequently used somewhat interchangeably (despite official definitions).

        I do like "Complete absence" (3.3) and "Partial absence"(3.2) as unambiguous terms/patterns using using "entire" or "part" for the site.

        Pattern 3.1, using "structure", seems like it should be avoided, and is what's behind things like:

        48301005|Congenital absence of finger| IS A 249750006|Absence of hand (finding)|

        I expect most people would read as "Absence of entire hand"...

        If it means "part of hand" - then use site= "Hand part (body structure)"

        If using "hand structure" then the morphology is really just "Morphologically abnormal structure (morphologic abnormality)" (with an appropriately accurate term).

        Congenital absence of finger already has other ancestors modelled like this:

        • 34111000|Congenital anomaly of the hand (disorder)|
        • 449682004|Congenital absence of part of upper limb (disorder)|

        (It's the modelling rather than the body structure hierarchy that appears to be at fault here.)


      2. This rework is being done as you suggested, such that the developmental nature of a disorder is modeled independently of the morphology itself using PATHOLOGICAL PROCESS = Pathological development process.  WRT partial, as stated below, only agenesis refers to the total absence of a structure due tot he lack of the primordial embryonic precursor.  Aplasia may be "complete" only in the sense that the embryonic precursor does not fully develop, but it is still there.

    2. The concepts where Aplasia of X is a parent to Congenital absence of X are being corrected.  Because the definition of aplasia is the lack of development of a structure, but the presence of the primordial structure suggests that it is always "partial" whereas Agenesis is the total lack of the primordial structure.  Structure of X subsumes both.