Litcius/Paper detail

De-identification is not enough: a comparison between de-identified and synthetic clinical notes

Atiquer Rahman Sarkar, Yao-Shun Chuang, Noman Mohammed, Xiaoqian Jiang

2024Scientific Reports24 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

For sharing privacy-sensitive data, de-identification is commonly regarded as adequate for safeguarding privacy. Synthetic data is also being considered as a privacy-preserving alternative. Recent successes with numerical and tabular data generative models and the breakthroughs in large generative language models raise the question of whether synthetically generated clinical notes could be a viable alternative to real notes for research purposes. In this work, we demonstrated that (i) de-identification of real clinical notes does not protect records against a membership inference attack, (ii) proposed a novel approach to generate synthetic clinical notes using the current state-of-the-art large language models, (iii) evaluated the performance of the synthetically generated notes in a clinical domain task, and (iv) proposed a way to mount a membership inference attack where the target model is trained with synthetic data. We observed that when synthetically generated notes closely match the performance of real data, they also exhibit similar privacy concerns to the real data. Whether other approaches to synthetically generated clinical notes could offer better trade-offs and become a better alternative to sensitive real notes warrants further investigation.

Topics & Concepts

Computer scienceIdentification (biology)InferenceSynthetic dataTask (project management)Machine learningArtificial intelligenceGenerative modelGenerative grammarSafeguardingData miningData scienceMedicineBiologyEconomicsBotanyManagementNursingPrivacy-Preserving Technologies in DataData Quality and ManagementMachine Learning in Healthcare
De-identification is not enough: a comparison between de-identified and synthetic clinical notes | Litcius