Hermes provides a set of terminology tools built around SNOMED CT including:
- a fast terminology service with full-text search functionality; ideal for driving autocompletion in user interfaces
- an inference engine in order to analyse SNOMED CT expressions and concepts and derive meaning
- cross-mapping to and from other code systems including ICD-10, Read codes and OPCS
- support for SNOMED CT compositional grammar (cg) and expression constraint language (ECL) v2.2.
- optional HL7 FHIR terminology server via hades
It is designed as both a library for embedding into larger applications and as a standalone microservice.
It is fast, both for import and for use. It imports and indexes the International and UK editions of SNOMED CT in less than 5 minutes; you can have a server running seconds after that.
It replaces previous similar tools I wrote in Java and Go and is designed to fit into a wider architecture with identifier resolution, mapping and semantics as first-class abstractions.
Rather than a single monolithic terminology server, it is entirely reasonable to build
multiple services, each providing an API around a specific edition or version of SNOMED CT,
and to use an API gateway to manage client access. Hermes
is lightweight and designed
to be composed with other services.
It is part of my PatientCare v4 development; previous versions have been operational within NHS Wales since 2007.
You can have a working terminology server running by typing only a few lines at a terminal. There's no need for any special hardware, or any special dependencies such as setting up your own elasticsearch or solr cluster. You just need a filesystem! Many other tools take hours to import the SNOMED data; you'll be finished in less than 10 minutes!
A HL7 FHIR terminology facade is under development : hades.
This exposes the functionality available in hermes
via a FHIR terminology API. This already
supports search and autocompletion using the $expand operation.
- Quickstart
- Common questions
- What can I do with
hermes
? - Difference to a 'national terminology server'?
- Localisation
- Can I get support?
- Why are you building so many repositories?
- What are you using
hermes
for? - What is this graph stuff you're doing?
- Is
hermes
fast? - Can I use
hermes
with containers? - Can I use
hermes
on Apple Silicon? - Can I use
hermes
on other architectures or operating systems such as FreeBSD?
- What can I do with
- Documentation
You can have a terminology server running in minutes. Full documentation is below, but here is a quickstart.
Before you begin, you will need to have Java installed.
You can choose to run a jar file by downloading a release and running using Java, or run from source code using Clojure:
Download the latest release from https://github.com/wardle/hermes/releases For simplicity, I've renamed the download jar file to 'hermes.jar' for these examples
Run the jar file using:
java -jar hermes.jar
When run without parameters, you will be given help text.
In all examples below, java -jar hermes.jar
is equivalent to clj -M:run
and vice versa.
Install clojure. e.g on Mac OS X:
brew install clojure
Then clone the repository, change directory and run:
git clone https://github.com/wardle/hermes
cd hermes
clj -M:run
When run without parameters, you will be given help text.
In all examples below, java -jar hermes.jar
is equivalent to clj -M:run
and vice versa.
You will need to download distributions from a National Release Centre.
How to do this will principally depend on your location.
For more information, see https://www.snomed.org/snomed-ct/get-snomed. SNOMED provide a Member Licensing and Distribution Centre.
In the United States, the National Library of Medicine (NLM) has more information. For example, the SNOMED USA edition is available from https://www.nlm.nih.gov/healthit/snomedct/us_edition.html.
In the United Kingdom, you can download a distribution from NHS Digital using the TRUD service.
hermes
also provides automated downloads for a range of distributions worldwide using the MLDS.
If you've downloaded a distribution manually, import using one of these commands:
java -jar hermes.jar --db snomed.db import ~/Downloads/snomed-2021/
or
clj -M:run --db snomed.db import ~/Downloads/snomed-2021/
If you're a UK user and want to use automatic downloads, you can do this
java -jar hermes.jar --db snomed.db install --dist uk.nhs/sct-clinical --dist uk.nhs/sct-drug-ext --api-key trud-api-key.txt --cache-dir /tmp/trud
clj -M:run --db snomed.db install --dist uk.nhs/sct-clinical --dist uk.nhs/sct-drug-ext --api-key trud-api-key.txt --cache-dir /tmp/trud
Ensure you have a TRUD API key.
This will download both the UK clinical edition and the UK drug extension. If you're a UK user, I'd recommend installing both.
When running interactively at the command-line, you can use --progress
to turn on
progress reporting when downloading items.
e.g.
java -jar hermes.jar --progress --db snomed.db install --dist uk.nhs/sct-clinical --dist uk.nhs/sct-drug-ext --api-key trud-api-key.txt --cache-dir /tmp/trud
clj -M:run --progress --db snomed.db install --dist uk.nhs/sct-clinical --dist uk.nhs/sct-drug-ext --api-key trud-api-key.txt --cache-dir /tmp/trud
You can download a specific edition using an ISO 6801 formatted date:
java -jar hermes.jar --db snomed.db install --dist uk.nhs/sct-clinical --api-key trud-api-key.txt --cache-dir /tmp/trud --release-date 2021-03-24
java -jar hermes.jar --db snomed.db install --dist uk.nhs/sct-drug-ext --api-key trud-api-key.txt --cache-dir /tmp/trud --release-date 2021-03-24
or
clj -M:run --db snomed.db install --dist uk.nhs/sct-clinical --api-key trud-api-key.txt --cache-dir /tmp/trud --release-date 2021-03-24
clj -M:run --db snomed.db install --dist uk.nhs/sct-drug-ext --api-key trud-api-key.txt --cache-dir /tmp/trud --release-date 2021-03-24
These are most useful for building reproducible container images. You can get a list of available UK versions by simply looking at the TRUD website, or using:
java -jar hermes.jar available --dist uk.nhs/sct-clinical --api-key trud-api-key.txt --cache-dir /tmp/trud
or
clj -M:run available --dist uk.nhs/sct-clinical --api-key trud-api-key.txt --cache-dir /tmp/trud
My tiny i5 'NUC' machine takes 1 minute to import the UK edition of SNOMED CT and a further minute to import the UK dictionary of medicines and devices.
If you have an account with the MLDS, then you can use that website to download
a distribution manually, or hermes
can do it for you.
java -jar hermes.jar available
or
clj -M:run available
For example, to install the Irish distribution:
java -jar hermes.jar --db snomed.db install --dist ie.mlds/285520 --username xxxx --password password.txt
or
clj -M:run --db snomed.db install --dist ie.mlds/285520 --username xxxx --password password.txt
You can request a specific version by providing --release-date
as an option.
You will need to have a licence for the distribution you are trying to download,
or you will get an 'invalid credentials' error.
You must index. Compaction is not mandatory, but advisable.
java -jar hermes.jar --db snomed.db index compact
or
clj -M:run --db snomed.db index compact
My machine takes 6 minutes to build the search indices and 20 seconds to compact the database.
java -jar hermes.jar --db snomed.db --port 8080 --bind-address 0.0.0.0 serve
or
clj -M:run --db snomed.db --port 8080 serve
You can use hades with the 'snomed.db' index to give you a FHIR terminology server.
More detailed documentation is included below.
You can use multiple commands at the same time.
For example:
java -jar hermes.jar --api-key trud-api-key.txt --db snomed.db install uk.nhs/sct-clinical index compact serve
Will download, extract, import, index and compact a database, and then run a server.
hermes
provides a simple library, and optionally a microservice, to help
you make use of SNOMED CT.
A library can be embedded into your application; this is easy using Clojure or Java or any other language running on the JVM. You make calls using the API just as you'd use any regular library.
A microservice runs independently and you make use of the data and software by making an API call over the network. This makes the functionality available to any software code that can use HTTP and JSON, such as C#, Python or R.
Like all PatientCare
components, you can use hermes
in either way.
Sometimes, when you're starting out, it's best to use as a library but larger
projects and larger installations will want to run their software components
independently, optimising for usage patterns, resilience, reliability and
rate of change.
Most people who use a terminology run a server and make calls over the network.
Previously, I implemented SNOMED CT within an EPR.
Later I realised how important it was to build it as a separate module;
I created terminology servers in Java, and then later in Go;
hermes
is written in Clojure. In the UK, the different health services in England
and Wales have procured a centralised national terminology server.
While I support the provision of a national terminology server for convenience,
I think it's important to recognise that it is the data that matters most. We
need to cooperate and collaborate on semantic interoperability, but the software
services that make use of those data can be centralised or distributed; when I
do analytics, I can't see me making server round-trips for every check of
subsumption! That would be silly; I've been using SNOMED for analytics for
longer than most; you need flexibility in provisioning terminology services. I
want tooling that can both provide services at scale, while is capable of
running on my personal computers as well.
Unlike other available terminology servers, hermes
is lightweight and has no
other dependencies except a filesystem, which can be read-only when in
operation. This makes it ideal for use in situations such as a data pipeline,
perhaps built upon Apache Kafka - with hermes
, SNOMED analytics capability can
be embedded anywhere.
I don't believe in the idea of uploading codesystems and value sets in place. My approach to versioning is to run different services; I simply deploy new services and switch at the API gateway level.
SNOMED CT is distributed across the world. The base distribution is the International release, but your local distribution will include this together with local data. Local data will include region-specific language reference sets.
The core SNOMED API relating to concepts and their meaning is not affected by issues of locale. Locale is used to derive the synonyms for any given concept. There should be a single preferred synonym for every concept in a given language reference set.
When you build a database, the search index caches the preferred synonyms using the installed locales.
Yes. Raise an issue, or more formal support options are available on request, including a fully-managed service.
Yes, I have a lot of repositories at https://github.com/wardle, providing functionality such as:
-
Integration with UK NHS services via concierge
-
UK dictionary of medicines and devices via dmd
-
socioeconomic deprivation data via deprivare
-
UK reference data updates via trud
-
UK organisational data via clods
-
UK geographical data via the NHS postcode directory nhspd
-
I previously built an electronic patient record as a monolithic application with many of these subsystems as modules of that larger system. Over time, I'm splitting them out into their own more independent modules.
I see the future of building health and care applications as simply composing together different modules of core well-tested functionality to solve user problems.
Small modules of functionality are easier to develop, easier to understand, easier to test and easier to maintain. I design modules to be composable so that I can stitch different components together in order to solve problems.
In larger systems, it is easy to see code rotting. Dependencies become outdated and the software becomes difficult to change easily because of software that depend on it. Small, well-defined modules are much easier to build and are less likely to need ongoing changes over time; my goal is to need to update modules only in response to changes in domain not software itself. I aim for an accretion of functionality.
It is very difficult to 'prove' software is working as designed when there are lots of moving parts.
I have embedded it into clinical systems; I use it for a fast autocompletion service so users start typing and the diagnosis, or procedure, or occupation, or ethnicity, or whatever, pops up. Users don't generally know they're using SNOMED CT. I use it to populate pop-ups and drop-down controls, and I use it for decision support to switch functionality on and off in my user interface - e.g. does this patient have a type of 'x' such as motor neurone disease - as well as analytics. A large number of my academic publications are as a result of using SNOMED in analytics.
I think health and care data are and always will be heterogeneous, incomplete and difficult to process. I do not think trying to build entities or classes representing our domain works at scale; it is fine for toy applications and trivial data modelling such as e-observations, but classes and object-orientation cannot scale across such a complete and disparate environment. Instead, I find it much easier to think about first-class properties - entity - attribute - value - and use such triples as a way of building and navigating a complex, hierarchical graph.
I am using a graph API in order to decouple subsystems and can now navigate from clinical data into different types of reference data seamlessly. For example, with the same backend data, I can view an x.500 representation of a practitioner, or a FHIR R4 Practitioner resource model. The key is to recognise that identifier resolution and mapping are first class problems within the health and care domain. Similarly, I think the semantics of reading data are very different to one of writing data. I cannot shoehorn health and care data into a REST model in which we read and write to resources representing the type. Instead, just as in real-life, we record event data which can effect change. In the end, it is all data.
Hermes benefits from the speed of the libraries it uses, particularly Apache Lucene and lmdb, and from some fundamental design decisions including read-only operation and memory-mapped data files. It provides a HTTP server using the lightweight and reliable jetty web server.
I have a small i3 NUC server on my local wifi network, and here is an example of load testing, in which users are typing 'mnd' and expecting an autocompletion:
mark@jupiter classes % wrk -c300 -t12 -d30s --latency 'http://nuc:8080/v1/snomed/search?s=mnd'
Running 30s test @ http://nuc:8080/v1/snomed/search?s=mnd
12 threads and 300 connections
Thread Stats Avg Stdev Max +/- Stdev
Latency 40.36ms 19.97ms 565.73ms 92.08%
Req/Sec 632.19 66.79 0.85k 68.70%
Latency Distribution
50% 38.76ms
75% 45.93ms
90% 54.09ms
99% 79.31ms
226942 requests in 30.09s, 125.75MB read
Requests/sec: 7540.91
Transfer/sec: 4.18MB
This uses 12 threads to make 300 concurrent HTTP connections. On 99% of occasions, that would provide a fast enough response for autocompletion (<79ms). Of course, that is users typing at exactly the same time, so a single instance could support more concurrent users than that. Given its design, Hermes is designed to easily scale horizontally, because you can simply run more servers and load balance across them. Of course, these data are fairly crude, because in real-life you'll be doing more complex concurrent calls. In real deployments, I've only needed one instance for hundreds of concurrent users, but it is nice to know I can scale easily.
Yes. It is designed to be containerised, although I have a mixture of different approaches in production, including running from source code directly. I would usually advise creating a volume and populating that with data, and then permitting read-only access to your service containers. A shared volume can be memory mapped by multiple running instances and provide high scalability.
There are some examples of different configurations available.
Yes. There are three options.
The first is to use Rosetta and run an x86 Java SDK and this will look for an x86 LMDB library already bundled with hermes
.
The other two options install a native aarch64 LMDB library, and make it available to
hermes
. The best performance will be gained from using a native library.
The next version of lmdbjava
will include a pre-built lmdb binary for ARM on
Mac OS X, so these steps will become unnecessary and hermes
will work on
multiple architectures and operating systems without needing these steps.
For example, you can get a list of installed JDKs:
$ /usr/libexec/java_home -V
11.0.17 (arm64) "Amazon.com Inc." - "Amazon Corretto 11" /Users/mark/Library/Java/JavaVirtualMachines/corretto-11.0.17/Contents/Home
11.0.14.1 (x86_64) "Azul Systems, Inc." - "Zulu 11.54.25" /Users/mark/Library/Java/JavaVirtualMachines/azul-11.0.14.1-1--x86/Contents/Home
Choose an SDK and check what we are using
$ export JAVA_HOME=$(/usr/libexec/java_home -v 11.0.14.1)
$ clj -M -e '(System/getProperty "os.arch")'
"x86_64"
Here I use homebrew on my mac:
brew install lmdb
brew list lmdb
Once you have a native LMDB installed on your machine, you can reference it from the command line:
java -Dlmdbjava.native.lib=/opt/homebrew/Cellar/lmdb/0.9.30/lib/liblmdb.dylib -jar target/hermes-1.2.1151.jar --db snomed.db status
or
clj -J-Dlmdbjava.native.lib=/opt/homebrew/Cellar/lmdb/0.9.30/lib/liblmdb.dylib -M:run --db snomed.db status
Install the xcode command line tools, if they are not already installed
xcode-select --install
And then download lmdb and build:
git clone --depth 1 https://git.openldap.org/openldap/openldap.git
cd openldap/libraries/liblmdb
make -e SOEXT=.dylib
mkdir -p ~/Library/Java/Extensions
cp liblmdb.dylib ~/Library/Java/Extensions
In this example, rather than specifying the location of the library at the command line, I'm just copying the library to a well known location.
Once this native library is copied, you can use hermes
natively using an arm64 based JDK.
$ export JAVA_HOME=$(/usr/libexec/java_home -v 11.0.17)
$ clj -M -e '(System/getProperty "os.arch")'
"aarch64"
If hermes
does not already contain a pre-built binary for your operating system and architecture,
you simply need to install lmdb yourself. You may need to also tell hermes
where to
find the native library.
e.g. on FreeBSD:
$ pkg info -lx lmdb | grep liblmdb
/usr/local/lib/liblmdb.a
/usr/local/lib/liblmdb.so
/usr/local/lib/liblmdb.so.0
java -Dlmdbjava.native.lib=/usr/local/lib/liblmdb.so -jar target/hermes-1.2.1151.jar --db snomed.db status
or
clj -J-Dlmdbjava.native.lib=/usr/local/lib/liblmdb.so -M:run --db snomed.db status
Ensure you have a pre-built jar file, or the source code checked out from github. See below for build instructions.
I'd recommend installing clojure and running using source code but use the pre-built jar file if you prefer.
If your local distributor is supported, hermes
can do this automatically for you.
Otherwise, you will need to download your local distribution(s) manually.
You can see distributions that are available for automatic installation:
java -jar hermes.jar available
clj -M:run available
The basic command is:
clj -M:run --db snomed.db install --dist <distribution-identifier> [properties]
or if you are using a precompiled jar:
java -jar hermes.jar --db snomed.db install --dist <distribution-identifier> [properties]
The distribution, as defined by distribution-identifier
, will be downloaded
and imported to the file-based database snomed.db
.
Distribution-identifier | Description |
---|---|
uk.nhs/sct-clinical | UK SNOMED CT clinical - incl international release |
uk.nhs/sct-drug-ext | UK SNOMED CT drug extension - incl dm+d |
uk.nhs/sct-monolith | UK SNOMED CT monolith edition: includes everything |
At the time of writing, the UK monolith edition is labelled as Draft for Trial Use
.
Each distribution might require custom configuration options.
For example, the UK releases use the NHS Digital TRUD API, and so you need to pass in the following parameters:
--api-key
: path to a file containing your NHS Digital TRUD api key--cache-dir
: directory to use for downloading and caching releases
For example, these commands will download, cache and install the International release, the UK clinical edition and the UK drug extension:
clj -M:run --db snomed.db install uk.nhs/sct-monolith --api-key=trud-api-key.txt --cache-dir=/tmp/trud
hermes
will tell you what configuration parameters are required:
java -jar hermes.jar install --dist uk.nhs/sct-clinical --help
or
clj -M:run install --dist uk.nhs/sct-clinical --help
For the UK, TRUD requires an --api-key
, which should be a path to a file
containing your API key for that service.
You will need to provide different configuration options if hermes
is using the MLDS to download distributions:
java -jar hermes.jar install --dist nl.mlds/128785 --help
or
clj -M:run install --dist nl.mlds/128785 --help
For MLDS downloads, you will need to provide --username
and --password
options.
The password should be the path to a file containing your password. This makes
it safer to use in automated pipelines and less likely to be accidentally logged.
Depending on where you live in the World, download the most appropriate distribution(s) for your needs.
In the UK, we can obtain these from TRUD.
For example, you can download the UK "Clinical Edition", containing the International and UK clinical distributions as part of TRUD pack 26/subpack 101.
Optionally, you can also download the UK SNOMED CT drug extension, that contains the dictionary of medicines and devices (dm+d) is available as part of TRUD pack 26/subpack 105.
Once you have downloaded what you need, unzip them to a common directory and
then you can use hermes
to create a file-based database.
If you are running using the jar file:
java -jar hermes.jar --db snomed.db import ~/Downloads/snomed-2020
If you are running from source code:
clj -M:run --db snomed.db import ~/Downloads/snomed-2020/
The import of both International and UK distribution files takes a total of less than 3 minutes on my machine.
For correct operation, indices are needed for components, search and reference set membership.
Run
java -jar hermes.jar --db snomed.db index
or
clj -M:run --db snomed.db index
This will build the indices; it takes about 6 minutes on my machine.
This reduces the file size and takes 20 seconds. This is an optional step, but recommended.
java -jar hermes.jar --db snomed.db compact
or
clj -M:run --db snomed.db compact
When I first built terminology tools, either in Java or in Go, I needed to also build a custom command-line interface in order to explore the ontology. This is not necessary as most developers using Clojure quickly learn the value of the REPL; a read-evaluate-print-loop in which one can issue arbitrary commands to execute. As such, one has a full Turing-complete language (a lisp) in which to explore the domain.
I usually use a REPL from within my IDE so run a REPL from there. You can run an nREPL server, which makes it easy to connect from other editors, such as emacs or neovim:
clj -M:dev:nrepl-server
You can run a REPL and use the terminology services interactively at the command-line, but I would not advise this. It is much better to use a REPL within your editor.
clj -M:dev
You can obtain status information about any index by using:
clj -M:run --db snomed.db status --format json
Result:
{"releases":
["SNOMED Clinical Terms version: 20220731 [R] (July 2022 Release)",
"35.6.0_20230315000001 UK drug extension",
"35.6.0_20230315000001 UK clinical extension"],
"locales":["en-GB", "en-US"],
"components":
{"concepts":1068735,
"descriptions":3050621,
"relationships":7956235,
"concrete-values":33349,
"refsets":541,
"refset-items":13349472,
"indices":
{"descriptions-concept":3050621,
"concept-parent-relationships":4737884,
"concept-child-relationships":4737884,
"component-refsets":10595249,
"associations":1254384,
"descriptions-search":3050621,
"members-search":13349472}}}
In this example, you can see I have the July 2022 International release, with the UK clinical and drug extensions from March 2023. Given that these releases have been imported, hermes recognises it can support the locales en-GB and en-US. For completeness, detailed statistics on components and indices are also provided. Additional options are available:
java -jar hermes.jar --db snomed.db status --help
or
clj -M:run --db snomed.db status --help
By default, data are returned using json, but you can request edn by simply adding "Accept:application/edn" in the request header.
java -jar hermes.jar --db snomed.db --port 8080 --bind-address 0.0.0.0 serve
or
clj -M:run --db snomed.db --port 8080 --bind-address 0.0.0.0 serve
There are a number of configuration options for serve
:
java -jar hermes.jar serve --help
or
clj -M:run serve --help
Usage: hermes [options] serve
Start a terminology server
Options:
--allowed-origin "*" or ORIGIN [] Set CORS policy, with "*" or hostname
--allowed-origins "*" or ORIGINS Set CORS policy, with "*" or comma-delimited hostnames
-a, --bind-address BIND_ADDRESS Address to bind
-d, --db PATH Path to database directory
-h, --help
--locale LOCALE en-GB Set default / fallback locale
-p, --port PORT 8080 Port number
--bind-address
is optional. You may want to use--bind-address 0.0.0.0
--allowed-origins
is optional. You could use--allowed-origins "*"
or--allowed-origins example.com,example.net
--allowed-origin example.com --allowed-origin example.net
is equivalent to--allowed-origins example.com,example.net
.--allowed-origin "*"
is equivalent to--allowed-origins "*"
--locale
sets the default locale. This is used as a default if clients do not specify their preference. e.g.--locale=en-GB
By default, the default locale will be determined by looking at which language reference sets are installed.
You can use hades
together with the
files you have just created to run a FHIR R4 terminology server.
There are a range of endpoints.
I have a very small, low-powered server (<$3/mo) available for demonstration purposes. It is not intended for production use.
Here are some examples:
- /v1/snomed/concepts/24700007 - basic data about a single concept
- /v1/snomed/concepts/24700007/descriptions - all descriptions for concept
- /v1/snomed/concepts/24700007/preferred : preferred description for concept. Use an
Accept-Language
header to choose your locale (see below). - /v1/snomed/concepts/24700007/extended : an extended concept
- /v1/snomed/concepts/1231295007/properties?expand=1 : properties for a concept
- /v1/snomed/concepts/586591000000100/historical - historical associations for this concept
- /v1/snomed/concepts/24700007/refsets - refsets to which this concept is a member
- /v1/snomed/concepts/24700007/map/999002271000000101 - crossmap to alternate codesystem (ICD-10 in this example)
- /v1/snomed/concepts/24700007/map/991411000000109 - map into a SNOMED subset (the UK emergency unit refset in this example)
- /v1/snomed/crossmap/999002271000000101/G35X - cross from an alternate codesystem (ICD-10 in this example)
- /v1/snomed/search?s=mnd&constraint=<64572001&maxHits=5 - search for a term, constrained by SNOMED ECL expression
- /v1/snomed/expand?ecl= <19829001 AND <301867009&includeHistoric=true - expand SNOMED ECL expression
WARNING
The HTTP API returns data formatted as either JSON or EDN. Identifiers, such as concept or description identifiers, in SNOMED CT are 64-bit positive integers. The JSON specification does not limit the size of numeric types, but some implementations struggle to properly manage very large numbers and can silently truncate numbers. Most implementations have no such difficulty; if your client library or platform does not properly handle large numbers in JSON, there is usually a way to configure your parser to work correctly. For example, in JavaScript, you can use a reviver parameter.
Hermes could offer a per-server, or per-request configuration to stringify identifiers when output to JSON to help broken client implementations. If this applies to you, please join the discussion.
http '127.0.0.1:8080/v1/snomed/concepts/24700007'
{
"active": true,
"definitionStatusId": 900000000000074008,
"effectiveTime": "2002-01-31",
"id": 24700007,
"moduleId": 900000000000207008
}
Try it live: http://128.140.5.148:8080/v1/snomed/concepts/24700007
You'll want to use the other endpoints much more frequently.
http 127.0.0.1:8080/v1/snomed/concepts/24700007/extended
Try it live: http://128.140.5.148:8080/v1/snomed/concepts/24700007/extended
The result is an extended concept definition - all the information
needed for inference, logic and display. For example, at the client
level, we can then check whether this is a type of demyelinating disease
or is a disease affecting the central nervous system without further
server round-trips. Each relationship also includes the transitive closure tables for that
relationship, making it easier to execute logical inference.
Note how the list of descriptions includes a convenient
acceptableIn
and preferredIn
so you can easily display the preferred
term for your locale. If you provide an Accept-Language header, then
you will also get a preferredDescription that is the best choice for those
language preferences given what is installed.
HTTP/1.1 200 OK
Content-Type: application/json
Date: Mon, 08 Mar 2021 22:01:13 GMT
{
"concept": {
"active": true,
"definitionStatusId": 900000000000074008,
"effectiveTime": "2002-01-31",
"id": 24700007,
"moduleId": 900000000000207008
},
"descriptions": [
{
"acceptableIn": [],
"active": true,
"caseSignificanceId": 900000000000448009,
"conceptId": 24700007,
"effectiveTime": "2017-07-31",
"id": 41398015,
"languageCode": "en",
"moduleId": 900000000000207008,
"preferredIn": [
900000000000509007,
900000000000508004,
999001261000000100
],
"refsets": [
900000000000509007,
900000000000508004,
999001261000000100
],
"term": "Multiple sclerosis",
"typeId": 900000000000013009
},
{
"acceptableIn": [],
"active": false,
"caseSignificanceId": 900000000000020002,
"conceptId": 24700007,
"effectiveTime": "2002-01-31",
"id": 41399011,
"languageCode": "en",
"moduleId": 900000000000207008,
"preferredIn": [],
"refsets": [],
"term": "Multiple sclerosis, NOS",
"typeId": 900000000000013009
},
{
"acceptableIn": [],
"active": false,
"caseSignificanceId": 900000000000020002,
"conceptId": 24700007,
"effectiveTime": "2015-01-31",
"id": 41400016,
"languageCode": "en",
"moduleId": 900000000000207008,
"preferredIn": [],
"refsets": [],
"term": "Generalized multiple sclerosis",
"typeId": 900000000000013009
},
{
"acceptableIn": [],
"active": false,
"caseSignificanceId": 900000000000020002,
"conceptId": 24700007,
"effectiveTime": "2015-01-31",
"id": 481990016,
"languageCode": "en",
"moduleId": 900000000000207008,
"preferredIn": [],
"refsets": [],
"term": "Generalised multiple sclerosis",
"typeId": 900000000000013009
},
{
"acceptableIn": [],
"active": true,
"caseSignificanceId": 900000000000448009,
"conceptId": 24700007,
"effectiveTime": "2017-07-31",
"id": 754365011,
"languageCode": "en",
"moduleId": 900000000000207008,
"preferredIn": [
900000000000509007,
900000000000508004,
999001261000000100
],
"refsets": [
900000000000509007,
900000000000508004,
999001261000000100
],
"term": "Multiple sclerosis (disorder)",
"typeId": 900000000000003001
},
{
"acceptableIn": [
900000000000509007,
900000000000508004,
999001261000000100
],
"active": true,
"caseSignificanceId": 900000000000448009,
"conceptId": 24700007,
"effectiveTime": "2017-07-31",
"id": 1223979019,
"languageCode": "en",
"moduleId": 900000000000207008,
"preferredIn": [],
"refsets": [
900000000000509007,
900000000000508004,
999001261000000100
],
"term": "Disseminated sclerosis",
"typeId": 900000000000013009
},
{
"acceptableIn": [
900000000000509007,
900000000000508004,
999001261000000100
],
"active": true,
"caseSignificanceId": 900000000000017005,
"conceptId": 24700007,
"effectiveTime": "2003-07-31",
"id": 1223980016,
"languageCode": "en",
"moduleId": 900000000000207008,
"preferredIn": [],
"refsets": [
900000000000509007,
900000000000508004,
999001261000000100
],
"term": "MS - Multiple sclerosis",
"typeId": 900000000000013009
},
{
"acceptableIn": [
900000000000509007,
900000000000508004,
999001261000000100
],
"active": true,
"caseSignificanceId": 900000000000017005,
"conceptId": 24700007,
"effectiveTime": "2003-07-31",
"id": 1223981017,
"languageCode": "en",
"moduleId": 900000000000207008,
"preferredIn": [],
"refsets": [
900000000000509007,
900000000000508004,
999001261000000100
],
"term": "DS - Disseminated sclerosis",
"typeId": 900000000000013009
}
],
"directParentRelationships": {
"116676008": [
409774005,
32693004
],
"116680003": [
6118003,
414029004,
39367000
],
"363698007": [
21483005
],
"370135005": [
769247005
]
},
"parentRelationships": {
"116676008": [
138875005,
107669003,
123037004,
409774005,
32693004,
49755003,
118956008
],
"116680003": [
6118003,
138875005,
404684003,
123946008,
118234003,
128139000,
23853001,
246556002,
363170005,
64572001,
118940003,
414029004,
362975008,
363171009,
39367000,
80690008,
362965005
],
"363698007": [
138875005,
21483005,
442083009,
123037004,
25087005,
91689009,
91723000
],
"370135005": [
138875005,
769247005,
308489006,
303102005,
281586009,
362981000,
719982003
]
},
"refsets": [
991381000000107,
999002271000000101,
991411000000109,
1127581000000103,
1127601000000107,
900000000000497000,
447562003
]
}
Each concept within SNOMED CT is associated with relationships. You can use
hermes
to return these as groups of properties, including concrete values
when available.
Here we look at properties for the concept representing the anti-convulsant lamotrigine:
http 'http://127.0.0.1:8080/v1/snomed/concepts/1231295007/properties'
Try it live http://128.140.5.148:8080/v1/snomed/concepts/1231295007/properties
Note that when results are not expanded, the metadata model is used to fix the cardinality of the values for the relationship in the context of the concept.
{
"0": {
"1142139005": "#1",
"116680003": [
779653004
],
"411116001": 385060002,
"763032000": 732936001,
"766939001": [
773862006
]
},
"1": {
"1142135004": "#250",
"1142136003": "#1",
"732943007": 387562000,
"732945000": 258684004,
"732947008": 732936001,
"762949000": 387562000
}
}
Available parameters
expand
- expand results to include transitive relationships (true
/false
/1
/0
)format
- format resultskey-format
- format keysvalue-format
- format values
For machine-interpretation, it is best to simply use ?expand=1
and process
identifiers appropriately. For human consumption, and for interactive use,
properties can be pretty-printed using a variety of formatting options:
Each format can be one of
id
the identifiersyn
synonym (language determined by Accept-Language header or system/index defaults)id:syn
a string of identifier and synonym[id:syn]
a vector of identifier and synonym{id:syn}
a map of identifier to synonym
Example:
http 'http://127.0.0.1:8080/v1/snomed/concepts/1231295007/properties?expand=0&format=id:syn'
Try it live http://128.140.5.148:8080/v1/snomed/concepts/1231295007/properties?expand=1&format=id:syn
Note again how the models within SNOMED CT are used to determine the cardinality of the returned relationships. A drug can have multiple roles, but has only single 'count of base of active ingredient and 'manufactured dose form' properties.
{
"0": {
"1142139005:Count of base of active ingredient": "#1",
"116680003:Is a": [
"779653004:Lamotrigine only product in oral dose form"
],
"411116001:Has manufactured dose form": "385060002:Prolonged-release oral tablet",
"763032000:Has unit of presentation": "732936001:Tablet",
"766939001:Plays role": [
"773862006:Anticonvulsant therapeutic role"
]
},
"1": {
"1142135004:Has presentation strength numerator value": "#250",
"1142136003:Has presentation strength denominator value": "#1",
"732943007:Has BoSS": "387562000:Lamotrigine",
"732945000:Has presentation strength numerator unit": "258684004:mg",
"732947008:Has presentation strength denominator unit": "732936001:Tablet",
"762949000:Has precise active ingredient": "387562000:Lamotrigine"
}
}
Example usage of search endpoint.
http '127.0.0.1:8080/v1/snomed/search?s=mnd\&constraint=<64572001&maxHits=5'
Try it live: http://128.140.5.148:8080/v1/snomed/search?s=mnd&constraint=<64572001&maxHits=5
[
{
"id": 486696014,
"conceptId": 37340000,
"term": "MND - Motor neurone disease",
"preferredTerm": "Motor neuron disease"
}
]
This searches only active concepts, but both active and inactive descriptions, by default. This can be changed per request. The defaults are sensible, because a user trying to find something with a now inactive synonym such as 'Wegener's Granulomatosis' will be suprised that their search fails to return any results.
Search parameters:
s
- the text to searchconstraint
- an ECL expression to constrain the search; I never use search without thismaxHits
- maximum number of hitsinactiveConcepts
- whether to search inactive concepts (default,false
)inactiveDescriptions
- whether to search inactive descriptions (default,true
)fuzzy
- whether to use fuzziness for search (default,false
)fallbackFuzzy
- whether to retry using a fuzziness factor if initial search returns no results (default,false
)removeDuplicates
- whether to remove consecutive results with the same conceptId and text (default,false
)
For autocompletion, in a typical type-ahead user interface control, you might use fallbackFuzzy=1
(or
fallbackFuzzy=true
) and removeDuplicates=1
(or removeDuplicates=true
).
That will mean that if a user mistypes one or two characters, they should still get some sensible results.
removeDuplicates
is designed to create a better user experience when searching SNOMED CT. In general, during search,
you will want to show to the user the multiple synonyms for a given concept. Recently however, and particularly if you
are using multiple SNOMED CT distributions (e.g. both the UK clinical and drug extensions), then a single concept may
have multiple synonyms with the same textual content. This can be disconcerting for end-users as it looks as if there
are duplicates in the autocompletion list. Each, of course, has a different description id, but we do not show identifiers
to end-users. To improve the user experience, I advise using removeDuplicates
to remove consecutive results with the
same conceptId and text.
Here I search for all UK medicinal products with the name amlodipine and populate my autocompletion control using the results:
http '127.0.0.1:8080/v1/snomed/search?s=amlodipine\&constraint=<10363601000001109&fallbackFuzzy=true&removeDuplicates=true&maxHits=500'
More complex expressions are supported, and no search term is actually needed.
Let's get all drugs with exactly three active ingredients:
http '127.0.0.1:8080/v1/snomed/search?constraint=<373873005|Pharmaceutical / biologic product| : [3..3] 127489000 |Has active ingredient| = < 105590001 |Substance|'
Or, what about all disorders of the lung that are associated with oedema?
http -j '127.0.0.1:8080/v1/snomed/search?constraint= < 19829001 |Disorder of lung| AND < 301867009 |Edema of trunk|'
The ECL can be written more concisely:
http -j '127.0.0.1:8080/v1/snomed/search?constraint= <19829001 AND <301867009'
SNOMED CT provides the Expression Constraint Language (ECL)
to declaratively define constraints for expressions. hermes
provides support
for the latest version of ECL. If you are simply expanding an ECL expression
without search terms, you can use the expand
endpoint.
http -j '127.0.0.1:8080/v1/snomed/expand?ecl= <19829001 AND <301867009&includeHistoric=true'
Try it live: http://128.140.5.148:8080/v1/snomed/expand?ecl=<19829001 AND <301867009&includeHistoric=true
This has an optional parameter includeHistoric
which can expand the expansion
to include historical associations. This is very useful in analytics. SNOMED
introduced dedicated historic functionality in ECL v2.0, allowing you to choose
to include historic associations as part of your ECL. You can use either approach
in hermes
.
For example,
<195967001 |Asthma| {{ +HISTORY-MOD }}
is an ECL expression that will return Asthma, and all subtypes, including those now considered inactive or duplicate. You can read more about the new history supplement functionality in ECL2.0 in the formal documentation.
Try it live: http://128.140.5.148:8080/v1/snomed/expand?ecl=<<195967001 {{ +HISTORY-MOD }}
As a concept identifier is actually a valid SNOMED ECL expression, you can do this:
http -j '127.0.0.1:8080/v1/snomed/expand?ecl=24700007&includeHistoric=true'
Try it live: http://128.140.5.148:8080/v1/snomed/expand?ecl=24700007&includeHistoric=true
[
{
"conceptId": 586591000000100,
"id": 1301271000000113,
"preferredTerm": "Multiple sclerosis NOS",
"term": "Multiple sclerosis NOS"
},
{
"conceptId": 192930001,
"id": 297181019,
"preferredTerm": "Multiple sclerosis NOS",
"term": "Multiple sclerosis NOS"
},
{
"conceptId": 24700007,
"id": 41398015,
"preferredTerm": "Multiple sclerosis",
"term": "Multiple sclerosis"
}
...
]
You can search using concrete values.
Here is SNOMED ECL that will return all products containing 250mg of amoxicillin that have an oral dose form:
< 763158003 |Medicinal product (product)| :
411116001 |Has manufactured dose form (attribute)| = << 385268001 |Oral dose form (dose form)| ,
{ << 127489000 |Has active ingredient (attribute)| = << 372687004 |Amoxicillin (substance)| ,
1142135004 |Has presentation strength numerator value (attribute)| = #250,
732945000 |Has presentation strength numerator unit (attribute)| = 258684004 |milligram (qualifier value)|}
You can use hermes
to expand this:
Try it live: http://128.140.5.148:8080/v1/snomed/expand?ecl=<7631580003...
Unfortunately, at the time of writing, the UK SNOMED drug extension doesn't currently publish concrete values data for products in the UK dictionary of medicines and devices, but this is on their roadmap.
There are endpoints for crossmapping to and from SNOMED.
Let's map one of our diagnostic terms into ICD-10:
24700007
is multiple sclerosis.999002271000000101
is the ICD-10 UK complex map reference set.
http -j 127.0.0.1:8080/v1/snomed/concepts/24700007/map/999002271000000101
Try it live: http://128.140.5.148:8080/v1/snomed/concepts/24700007/map/999002271000000101
Result:
[
{
"active": true,
"correlationId": 447561005,
"effectiveTime": "2020-08-05",
"id": "57433204-2371-5c6f-855f-94ff9dad7ba6",
"mapAdvice": "ALWAYS G35.X",
"mapCategoryId": 1,
"mapGroup": 1,
"mapPriority": 1,
"mapRule": "",
"mapTarget": "G35X",
"moduleId": 999000031000000106,
"referencedComponentId": 24700007,
"refsetId": 999002271000000101
}
]
And of course, we can crossmap back to SNOMED as well:
http -j 127.0.0.1:8080/v1/snomed/crossmap/999002271000000101/G35X
Try it live: http://128.140.5.148:8080/v1/snomed/crossmap/999002271000000101/G35X
If you map a concept into a reference set that doesn't contain that concept, you'll automatically get the best parent matches instead.
You will usually crossmap using a SNOMED CT crossmap reference set, such as those for ICD-10 or OPCS. However, Hermes
supports
crossmapping a concept into any reference set. You can use this feature in data analytics in order to reduce the dimensionality of your dataset.
Here we have multiple sclerosis (24700007
), and we're mapping into the UK emergency unit
reference set (991411000000109
):
http -j 127.0.0.1:8080/v1/snomed/concepts/24700007/map/991411000000109
Try it live: http://128.140.5.148:8080/v1/snomed/concepts/24700007/map/991411000000109
The UK emergency unit reference set gives a subset of concepts used for central reporting problems and diagnoses in UK emergency units.
As multiple sclerosis in that reference set, you'll simply get:
[
{
"active": true,
"effectiveTime": "2015-10-01",
"id": "d55ce305-3dcc-5723-8814-cd26486c37f7",
"moduleId": 999000021000000109,
"referencedComponentId": 24700007,
"refsetId": 991411000000109
}
]
But what happens if we try something that isn't in that emergency reference set?
Here is 'limbic encephalitis with LGI1 antibodies' (763794005
). It isn't in
that UK emergency unit reference set:
http -j 127.0.0.1:8080/v1/snomed/concepts/763794005/map/991411000000109
Try it live: http://128.140.5.148:8080/v1/snomed/concepts/763794005/map/991411000000109
Result:
[
{
"active": true,
"effectiveTime": "2015-10-01",
"id": "5b3b8cdd-dd02-50e3-b207-bf4a3aa17694",
"moduleId": 999000021000000109,
"referencedComponentId": 45170000,
"refsetId": 991411000000109
}
]
You get a more general concept - 'encephalitis' (45170000
) that is in the
emergency unit reference set. This makes it straightforward to map concepts
into subsets of terms as defined by a reference set for analytics.
You could limit users to only entering the terms in a subset, but much better to allow clinicians to regard highly-specific granular terms and be able to map to less granular terms on demand.
You can use git coordinates in a deps.edn file, or use maven:
In your deps.edn
file (make sure you change the commit-id):
[com.eldrix.hermes {:git/url "https://github.com/wardle/hermes.git"
:sha "097e3094070587dc9362ca4564401a924bea952c"}
In your pom.xml:
<dependency>
<groupId>com.eldrix</groupId>
<artifactId>hermes</artifactId>
<version>1.0.960</version>
</dependency>
Remember to use the latest version.
You may need to add Clojars as a repository in your build tool. Here for maven:
<repositories>
<repository>
<id>clojars.org</id>
<url>https://clojars.org/repo</url>
</repository>
</repositories>
See /doc/development on how to develop, test, lint, deploy and release hermes
.
Hermes
uses versions of form major.minor.commit
Hermes
builds a file-based database made up of a store and indices
and each database is also versioned. Hermes
of a specified major/minor
version is compatible with databases created by the same major/minor version.
For example, a database was created with Hermes v1.4.1265
can be read
by Hermes v1.4.1320
, but one created with Hermes v1.3.1262
cannot
If backwards compatibility can easily be preserved, the major/minor version is
kept the same. For example, when support for concrete values was added, this was
an additive change so that newer versions of Hermes
would simply degrade
gracefully, but throw a warning to say concrete values were not supported for
this database.
On some occasions, compatibility is broken even when there is only a minor change to database format to prevent user inconvenience, error or confusion. For example, in the change from 1.3 series to 1.4, the search index changed to use normalised (folded) text according to term locale. This was a small change and degradation could have occurred gracefully, but such a fallback would lead to varying behaviour depending on which database was used and potentially confuse users.
In general therefore, the policy for versioning is to enforce exact version
matching for a given Hermes
and database version with a bias towards bumping
versions when backwards compatibility or fallback modes of operation could
result in confusing or unexpected behaviour.
Mark