Azure Cognitive Services Health Insights Cancer Profiling client library for .NET - version 1.0.0-beta.1

Health Insights is an Azure Applied AI Service built with the Azure Cognitive Services Framework, that leverages multiple Cognitive Services, Healthcare API services and other Azure resources.

The Cancer Profiling model receives clinical records of oncology patients and outputs cancer staging, such as clinical stage TNM categories and pathologic stage TNM categories as well as tumor site, histology.

Source code | Package (NuGet) | API reference documentation | Product documentation

Getting started

Prerequisites

  • You need an Azure subscription to use this package.
  • An existing Cognitive Services Health Insights instance.

Install the package

Install the Azure Health Insights client Cancer Profiling library for .NET with NuGet:

dotnet add package Azure.Health.Insights.CancerProfiling --prerelease

This table shows the relationship between SDK versions and supported API versions of the service:

SDK version Supported API version of service
1.0.0-beta.1 2023-03-01-preview

Authenticate the client

You can find the endpoint for your Health Insights service resource using the Azure Portal or Azure CLI

# Get the endpoint for the Health Insights service resource
az cognitiveservices account show --name "resource-name" --resource-group "resource-group-name" --query "properties.endpoint"

Get the API Key

You can get the API Key from the Health Insights service resource in the Azure Portal. Alternatively, you can use Azure CLI snippet below to get the API key of your resource.

az cognitiveservices account keys list --resource-group <your-resource-group-name> --name <your-resource-name>

Create CancerProfilingClient with AzureKeyCredential

Once you have the value for the API key, create an AzureKeyCredential. With the endpoint and key credential, you can create the CancerProfilingClient:

string endpoint = "<endpoint>";
string apiKey = "<apiKey>";
var credential = new AzureKeyCredential(apiKey);
var client = new CancerProfilingClient(new Uri(endpoint), credential);

Key concepts

The Cancer Profiling model allows you to infer cancer attributes such as tumor site, histology, clinical stage TNM categories and pathologic stage TNM categories from unstructured clinical documents.

Examples

Cancer Profiling

OncoPhenotypeResult oncoPhenotypeResult = default;
try
{
    Operation<OncoPhenotypeResult> operation = await client.InferCancerProfileAsync(WaitUntil.Completed, oncoPhenotypeData);
    oncoPhenotypeResult = operation.Value;
}
catch (Exception ex)
{
    Console.WriteLine(ex.ToString());
    return;
}
// View operation results
if (oncoPhenotypeResult.Status == JobStatus.Succeeded)
{
    OncoPhenotypeResults oncoResults = oncoPhenotypeResult.Results;
    foreach (OncoPhenotypePatientResult patientResult in oncoResults.Patients)
    {
        Console.WriteLine($"\n==== Inferences of Patient {patientResult.Id} ====");
        foreach (OncoPhenotypeInference oncoInference in patientResult.Inferences)
        {
            Console.WriteLine($"\n=== Clinical Type: {oncoInference.Type.ToString()}  Value: {oncoInference.Value}   ConfidenceScore: {oncoInference.ConfidenceScore} ===");
            foreach (InferenceEvidence evidence in oncoInference.Evidence)
            {
                if (evidence.PatientDataEvidence != null)
                {
                    var dataEvidence = evidence.PatientDataEvidence;
                    Console.WriteLine($"Evidence {dataEvidence.Id} {dataEvidence.Offset} {dataEvidence.Length} {dataEvidence.Text}");
                }
                if (evidence.PatientInfoEvidence != null)
                {
                    var infoEvidence = evidence.PatientInfoEvidence;
                    Console.WriteLine($"Evidence {infoEvidence.System} {infoEvidence.Code} {infoEvidence.Name} {infoEvidence.Value}");
                }
            }
        }
    }
}
else
{
    IReadOnlyList<ResponseError> oncoErrors = oncoPhenotypeResult.Errors;
    foreach (ResponseError error in oncoErrors)
    {
        Console.WriteLine($"{error.Code} : {error.Message}");
    }
}

Troubleshooting

Setting up console logging

The simplest way to see the logs is to enable the console logging. To create an Azure SDK log listener that outputs messages to console use the AzureEventSourceListener.CreateConsoleLogger method.

// Setup a listener to monitor logged events.
using AzureEventSourceListener listener = AzureEventSourceListener.CreateConsoleLogger();

To learn more about other logging mechanisms see Diagnostics Samples.

Next steps

Additional documentation

For more extensive documentation on Azure Health Insights Cancer Profiling, see the Cancer Profiling documentation on docs.microsoft.com.

Contributing

This project welcomes contributions and suggestions. Most contributions require you to agree to a Contributor License Agreement (CLA) declaring that you have the right to, and actually do, grant us the rights to use your contribution. For details, visit cla.microsoft.com.

When you submit a pull request, a CLA-bot will automatically determine whether you need to provide a CLA and decorate the PR appropriately (e.g., label, comment). Simply follow the instructions provided by the bot. You will only need to do this once across all repos using our CLA.

This project has adopted the Microsoft Open Source Code of Conduct. For more information see the Code of Conduct FAQ or contact opencode@microsoft.com with any additional questions or comments.