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Privacy-Preserving Federated Model Predicting Bipolar Transition in Patients With Depression: Prediction Model Development Study

BACKGROUND: Mood disorder has emerged as a serious concern for public health; in particular, bipolar disorder has a less favorable prognosis than depression. Although prompt recognition of depression conversion to bipolar disorder is needed, early prediction is challenging due to overlapping symptom...

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Autores principales: Lee, Dong Yun, Choi, Byungjin, Kim, Chungsoo, Fridgeirsson, Egill, Reps, Jenna, Kim, Myoungsuk, Kim, Jihyeong, Jang, Jae-Won, Rhee, Sang Youl, Seo, Won-Woo, Lee, Seunghoon, Son, Sang Joon, Park, Rae Woong
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: JMIR Publications 2023
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10401196/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/37471130
http://dx.doi.org/10.2196/46165
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author Lee, Dong Yun
Choi, Byungjin
Kim, Chungsoo
Fridgeirsson, Egill
Reps, Jenna
Kim, Myoungsuk
Kim, Jihyeong
Jang, Jae-Won
Rhee, Sang Youl
Seo, Won-Woo
Lee, Seunghoon
Son, Sang Joon
Park, Rae Woong
author_facet Lee, Dong Yun
Choi, Byungjin
Kim, Chungsoo
Fridgeirsson, Egill
Reps, Jenna
Kim, Myoungsuk
Kim, Jihyeong
Jang, Jae-Won
Rhee, Sang Youl
Seo, Won-Woo
Lee, Seunghoon
Son, Sang Joon
Park, Rae Woong
author_sort Lee, Dong Yun
collection PubMed
description BACKGROUND: Mood disorder has emerged as a serious concern for public health; in particular, bipolar disorder has a less favorable prognosis than depression. Although prompt recognition of depression conversion to bipolar disorder is needed, early prediction is challenging due to overlapping symptoms. Recently, there have been attempts to develop a prediction model by using federated learning. Federated learning in medical fields is a method for training multi-institutional machine learning models without patient-level data sharing. OBJECTIVE: This study aims to develop and validate a federated, differentially private multi-institutional bipolar transition prediction model. METHODS: This retrospective study enrolled patients diagnosed with the first depressive episode at 5 tertiary hospitals in South Korea. We developed models for predicting bipolar transition by using data from 17,631 patients in 4 institutions. Further, we used data from 4541 patients for external validation from 1 institution. We created standardized pipelines to extract large-scale clinical features from the 4 institutions without any code modification. Moreover, we performed feature selection in a federated environment for computational efficiency and applied differential privacy to gradient updates. Finally, we compared the federated and the 4 local models developed with each hospital's data on internal and external validation data sets. RESULTS: In the internal data set, 279 out of 17,631 patients showed bipolar disorder transition. In the external data set, 39 out of 4541 patients showed bipolar disorder transition. The average performance of the federated model in the internal test (area under the curve [AUC] 0.726) and external validation (AUC 0.719) data sets was higher than that of the other locally developed models (AUC 0.642-0.707 and AUC 0.642-0.699, respectively). In the federated model, classifications were driven by several predictors such as the Charlson index (low scores were associated with bipolar transition, which may be due to younger age), severe depression, anxiolytics, young age, and visiting months (the bipolar transition was associated with seasonality, especially during the spring and summer months). CONCLUSIONS: We developed and validated a differentially private federated model by using distributed multi-institutional psychiatric data with standardized pipelines in a real-world environment. The federated model performed better than models using local data only.
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spelling pubmed-104011962023-08-05 Privacy-Preserving Federated Model Predicting Bipolar Transition in Patients With Depression: Prediction Model Development Study Lee, Dong Yun Choi, Byungjin Kim, Chungsoo Fridgeirsson, Egill Reps, Jenna Kim, Myoungsuk Kim, Jihyeong Jang, Jae-Won Rhee, Sang Youl Seo, Won-Woo Lee, Seunghoon Son, Sang Joon Park, Rae Woong J Med Internet Res Original Paper BACKGROUND: Mood disorder has emerged as a serious concern for public health; in particular, bipolar disorder has a less favorable prognosis than depression. Although prompt recognition of depression conversion to bipolar disorder is needed, early prediction is challenging due to overlapping symptoms. Recently, there have been attempts to develop a prediction model by using federated learning. Federated learning in medical fields is a method for training multi-institutional machine learning models without patient-level data sharing. OBJECTIVE: This study aims to develop and validate a federated, differentially private multi-institutional bipolar transition prediction model. METHODS: This retrospective study enrolled patients diagnosed with the first depressive episode at 5 tertiary hospitals in South Korea. We developed models for predicting bipolar transition by using data from 17,631 patients in 4 institutions. Further, we used data from 4541 patients for external validation from 1 institution. We created standardized pipelines to extract large-scale clinical features from the 4 institutions without any code modification. Moreover, we performed feature selection in a federated environment for computational efficiency and applied differential privacy to gradient updates. Finally, we compared the federated and the 4 local models developed with each hospital's data on internal and external validation data sets. RESULTS: In the internal data set, 279 out of 17,631 patients showed bipolar disorder transition. In the external data set, 39 out of 4541 patients showed bipolar disorder transition. The average performance of the federated model in the internal test (area under the curve [AUC] 0.726) and external validation (AUC 0.719) data sets was higher than that of the other locally developed models (AUC 0.642-0.707 and AUC 0.642-0.699, respectively). In the federated model, classifications were driven by several predictors such as the Charlson index (low scores were associated with bipolar transition, which may be due to younger age), severe depression, anxiolytics, young age, and visiting months (the bipolar transition was associated with seasonality, especially during the spring and summer months). CONCLUSIONS: We developed and validated a differentially private federated model by using distributed multi-institutional psychiatric data with standardized pipelines in a real-world environment. The federated model performed better than models using local data only. JMIR Publications 2023-07-20 /pmc/articles/PMC10401196/ /pubmed/37471130 http://dx.doi.org/10.2196/46165 Text en ©Dong Yun Lee, Byungjin Choi, Chungsoo Kim, Egill Fridgeirsson, Jenna Reps, Myoungsuk Kim, Jihyeong Kim, Jae-Won Jang, Sang Youl Rhee, Won-Woo Seo, Seunghoon Lee, Sang Joon Son, Rae Woong Park. Originally published in the Journal of Medical Internet Research (https://www.jmir.org), 20.07.2023. https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/), which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work, first published in the Journal of Medical Internet Research, is properly cited. The complete bibliographic information, a link to the original publication on https://www.jmir.org/, as well as this copyright and license information must be included.
spellingShingle Original Paper
Lee, Dong Yun
Choi, Byungjin
Kim, Chungsoo
Fridgeirsson, Egill
Reps, Jenna
Kim, Myoungsuk
Kim, Jihyeong
Jang, Jae-Won
Rhee, Sang Youl
Seo, Won-Woo
Lee, Seunghoon
Son, Sang Joon
Park, Rae Woong
Privacy-Preserving Federated Model Predicting Bipolar Transition in Patients With Depression: Prediction Model Development Study
title Privacy-Preserving Federated Model Predicting Bipolar Transition in Patients With Depression: Prediction Model Development Study
title_full Privacy-Preserving Federated Model Predicting Bipolar Transition in Patients With Depression: Prediction Model Development Study
title_fullStr Privacy-Preserving Federated Model Predicting Bipolar Transition in Patients With Depression: Prediction Model Development Study
title_full_unstemmed Privacy-Preserving Federated Model Predicting Bipolar Transition in Patients With Depression: Prediction Model Development Study
title_short Privacy-Preserving Federated Model Predicting Bipolar Transition in Patients With Depression: Prediction Model Development Study
title_sort privacy-preserving federated model predicting bipolar transition in patients with depression: prediction model development study
topic Original Paper
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10401196/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/37471130
http://dx.doi.org/10.2196/46165
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