Opinion Mining and Multi-Label Classification of Patient-Generated Long-Term Anti-Obesity Medication Reviews (Preprint)

2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Kyrian Ezendu ◽  
Askal Ali

BACKGROUND With the explosion of web 2.0 technology, patients have taken to the internet to share experiences about their health conditions and treatments. Online drug review portals currently allow patients to their experiences with drugs they used in managing their conditions. These data sources could be harnessed for patient-reported real-world evidence to understand the impact of drugs on the users. OBJECTIVE To understand patients’ opinions about long-term AOMs (phentermine-topiramate, orlistat, naltrexone-bupropion, lorcaserin, and liraglutide) through online patient-posted user reviews. To determine the frequency of occurrence of key obesity treatment outcomes and build a multi-label classification model for detecting key obesity outcome topics. METHODS We crawled drug.com, askaapatient.com, webmd.com, druglib.com, and extracted reviews posted by the users of long-term AOMs about their experience with the drugs. Next, we carried out a generic lexicon-based document-level sentiment analysis by matching the words in the reviews of each AOM with their polarity classes in the sentiment dictionary. We then calculated the scaled sentiment score to measure how averagely positive the patient’s opinion is towards the drugs. The frequencies of occurrence of weight, adverse effect, glycemic, blood pressure, lipidemic outcome topics in the posted reviews were analyzed. A Multi-label classification model for classifying obesity outcome related topics was built and tested. RESULTS Patients expressed the most positive opinion for lorcaserin with a scaled sentiment score of 0.139, followed by phentermine-topiramate with scaled sentiment score of 0.04. Orlistat and naltrexone-bupropion had scaled-sentiment scores of -0.008 and -0.02 respectively. Having a scaled sentiment score -0.036, liraglutide was the most negatively appraised long-term AOM by patients’ reviews. Comparing the frequency of occurrence of weight and cardiometabolic topic in the reviews, weight loss outcome was the dominant topic, occurring in 1585 reviews, adverse effect topic occurred in 1273 reviews, glycemic outcome topic occurred in 92 reviews, blood pressure outcome topic occurred in 72 reviews, lipidemic outcome topic occurred in 48 reviews and topic on pulse outcome occurred in 31 reviews. The Multi-label classification model trained with the patient-posted AOM reviews has F1 score of 0.98, 0.55, 0.67, 0.80, and 0.67 in predicting AOM-related weight loss, adverse effect, , glycemic, blood pressure, lipidemic and pulse topics respectively in free text form. CONCLUSIONS Sentiment analysis of patient-posted long-term AOM reviews could be useful in understanding patient‘s experience with long-term AOMs. Despite having being withdrawn for the market, lorcaserin was the most positively appraised long-term AOM followed by phentermine-topiramate, orlistat, naltrexone-bupropion, and liraglutide. The users of AOMs commented most on the weight and safety (adverse effects) outcomes of AOMs than cardio-metabolic outcomes of their treatments. Classification model trained with patient posted AOM reviews had a good performance in detecting efficacy and safety signals occurring in text documents. sentiments/opinions formed by obese and overweight patients from their experience with long-term AOMs could be used in demonstrating the values of the medications, as part of patient-reported real-world evidence.

2021 ◽  
Vol 11 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
Aline Bourdin ◽  
Marie Paule Schneider ◽  
Isabella Locatelli ◽  
Myriam Schluep ◽  
Olivier Bugnon ◽  
...  

AbstractThe Fingolimod Patient Support Program (F-PSP) is an interprofessional specialty pharmacy service designed to ensure responsible use of fingolimod by promoting patient safety and medication adherence. This study aims to evaluate the safety and medication adherence of patients who joined the F-PSP between 2013 and 2016. Sociodemographic and medical characteristics, patient safety data (patient-reported symptoms, discontinuations due to adverse events (AEs), repeated first-dose monitoring), and medication adherence (implementation, persistence, reasons for discontinuation, influence of covariates, barriers and facilitators) were described. Sixty-seven patients joined the F-PSP. Patients reported a high frequency of symptoms. Due to AEs, 7 patients discontinued fingolimod, 3 took therapeutic breaks, and 1 reduced the regimen temporarily. Three patients repeated the first-dose monitoring. Patients had a high medication adherence over the 18-month analysis period: implementation decreased from 98.8 to 93.7%, and fingolimod persistence was 83.2% at 18 months. The patients’ level of education, professional situation, and living with child(ren) influenced implementation. Patients reported more facilitators of medication adherence than barriers. The F-PSP seems valuable for supporting individual patients (ensuring responsible use of fingolimod and inviting patients for shared-decision making) and public health (indirectly gathering real-world evidence).


Author(s):  
Benedikt Fritzsching ◽  
Marco Contoli ◽  
Celeste Porsbjerg ◽  
Sarah Buchs ◽  
Julie Rask Larsen ◽  
...  

2019 ◽  
Vol 37 (15_suppl) ◽  
pp. e18248-e18248
Author(s):  
Raanan Berger ◽  
Lior Hasid ◽  
Irad Deutsch ◽  
Eliran Malki ◽  
Maytal Bivas-Benita

e18248 Background: Taxanes-induced neuropathy is common in BC patients receiving taxanes, forcing dose reductions and treatment delays and posing serious challenges for the long-term patient QoL. Discovering neuropathy predictors in patients could guide better treatment decisions, improved QoL and reduce healthcare costs. Belong digital PPN is a social network for cancer patients and caregivers that supports disease management. In this study we used our artificial intelligence (AI) engine to classify the prevalence, characteristics and taxanes-induced neuropathy status of BC patients. Methods: We analyzed real-world patient-reported outcomes provided voluntarily and anonymously from users on the Belong PPN. Data from BC patients reporting treatment with taxanes was extracted and additional analysis segmented the data to those who experienced neuropathy and those who did not. Further validation of the data was performed by our research team to assure accuracy. Results: We evaluated 169 BC cancer patients from the US treated with taxanes. In the cohort 72% were Paclitaxel-treated and 28% Docetaxel-treated at various disease stages: 68% at early stage BC (0-2) and 32% at the advanced/metastatic stages (3-4). 83% of Paclitaxel-treated patients and 67% of Docetaxel-treated patients reported experiencing neuropathy in the Belong platform. These real-world reports indicated significantly higher incidence of taxane-induced neuropathy in comparison to literature summarizing data from clinical trials, suggesting neuropathy incidence of 27% for paclitaxel and 16% for docetaxel (grades 2-4). Conclusions: Real-world patient-reported outcomes from the Belong PPN captured the prevalence of taxanes-induced neuropathy in BC patients and correlated it to the specific drug in use. Evidence for higher incidence of taxanes-induced neuropathy may lead to lower patient QoL and higher healthcare costs and should stimulate better treatment decisions. Further exploration of the gap between controlled clinical studies and real-world evidence is urgently needed to understand the true patient outcomes and optimize healthcare accordingly.


Diabetes Care ◽  
2017 ◽  
Vol 41 (1) ◽  
pp. 69-78 ◽  
Author(s):  
Olga Montvida ◽  
Jonathan Shaw ◽  
John J. Atherton ◽  
Frances Stringer ◽  
Sanjoy K. Paul

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