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Social media for arthritis-related comparative effectiveness and safety research and the impact of direct-to-consumer advertising

BACKGROUND: Social media may complement traditional data sources to answer comparative effectiveness/safety questions after medication licensure. METHODS: The Treato platform was used to analyze all publicly available social media data including Facebook, blogs, and discussion boards for posts menti...

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Autores principales: Curtis, Jeffrey R., Chen, Lang, Higginbotham, Phillip, Nowell, W. Benjamin, Gal-Levy, Ronit, Willig, James, Safford, Monika, Coe, Joseph, O’Hara, Kaitlin, Sa’adon, Roee
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: BioMed Central 2017
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5341200/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/28270190
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/s13075-017-1251-y
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author Curtis, Jeffrey R.
Chen, Lang
Higginbotham, Phillip
Nowell, W. Benjamin
Gal-Levy, Ronit
Willig, James
Safford, Monika
Coe, Joseph
O’Hara, Kaitlin
Sa’adon, Roee
author_facet Curtis, Jeffrey R.
Chen, Lang
Higginbotham, Phillip
Nowell, W. Benjamin
Gal-Levy, Ronit
Willig, James
Safford, Monika
Coe, Joseph
O’Hara, Kaitlin
Sa’adon, Roee
author_sort Curtis, Jeffrey R.
collection PubMed
description BACKGROUND: Social media may complement traditional data sources to answer comparative effectiveness/safety questions after medication licensure. METHODS: The Treato platform was used to analyze all publicly available social media data including Facebook, blogs, and discussion boards for posts mentioning inflammatory arthritis (e.g. rheumatoid, psoriatic). Safety events were self-reported by patients and mapped to medical ontologies, resolving synonyms. Disease and symptom-related treatment indications were manually redacted. The units of analysis were unique terms in posts. Pre-specified conditions (e.g. herpes zoster (HZ)) were selected based upon safety signals from clinical trials and reported as pairwise odds ratios (ORs); drugs were compared with Fisher’s exact test. Empirically identified events were analyzed using disproportionality analysis and reported as relative reporting ratios (RRRs). The accuracy of a natural language processing (NLP) classifier to identify cases of shingles associated with arthritis medications was assessed. RESULTS: As of October 2015, there were 785,656 arthritis-related posts. Posts were predominantly US posts (75%) from patient authors (87%) under 40 years of age (61%). For HZ posts (n = 1815), ORs were significantly increased with tofacitinib versus other rheumatoid arthritis therapies. ORs for mentions of perforated bowel (n = 13) were higher with tocilizumab versus other therapies. RRRs associated with tofacitinib were highest in conditions related to baldness and hair regrowth, infections and cancer. The NLP classifier had a positive predictive value of 91% to identify HZ. There was a threefold increase in posts following television direct-to-consumer advertisement (p = 0.04); posts expressing medication safety concerns were significantly more frequent than favorable posts. CONCLUSION: Social media is a challenging yet promising data source that may complement traditional approaches for comparative effectiveness research for new medications.
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spelling pubmed-53412002017-03-10 Social media for arthritis-related comparative effectiveness and safety research and the impact of direct-to-consumer advertising Curtis, Jeffrey R. Chen, Lang Higginbotham, Phillip Nowell, W. Benjamin Gal-Levy, Ronit Willig, James Safford, Monika Coe, Joseph O’Hara, Kaitlin Sa’adon, Roee Arthritis Res Ther Research Article BACKGROUND: Social media may complement traditional data sources to answer comparative effectiveness/safety questions after medication licensure. METHODS: The Treato platform was used to analyze all publicly available social media data including Facebook, blogs, and discussion boards for posts mentioning inflammatory arthritis (e.g. rheumatoid, psoriatic). Safety events were self-reported by patients and mapped to medical ontologies, resolving synonyms. Disease and symptom-related treatment indications were manually redacted. The units of analysis were unique terms in posts. Pre-specified conditions (e.g. herpes zoster (HZ)) were selected based upon safety signals from clinical trials and reported as pairwise odds ratios (ORs); drugs were compared with Fisher’s exact test. Empirically identified events were analyzed using disproportionality analysis and reported as relative reporting ratios (RRRs). The accuracy of a natural language processing (NLP) classifier to identify cases of shingles associated with arthritis medications was assessed. RESULTS: As of October 2015, there were 785,656 arthritis-related posts. Posts were predominantly US posts (75%) from patient authors (87%) under 40 years of age (61%). For HZ posts (n = 1815), ORs were significantly increased with tofacitinib versus other rheumatoid arthritis therapies. ORs for mentions of perforated bowel (n = 13) were higher with tocilizumab versus other therapies. RRRs associated with tofacitinib were highest in conditions related to baldness and hair regrowth, infections and cancer. The NLP classifier had a positive predictive value of 91% to identify HZ. There was a threefold increase in posts following television direct-to-consumer advertisement (p = 0.04); posts expressing medication safety concerns were significantly more frequent than favorable posts. CONCLUSION: Social media is a challenging yet promising data source that may complement traditional approaches for comparative effectiveness research for new medications. BioMed Central 2017-03-07 2017 /pmc/articles/PMC5341200/ /pubmed/28270190 http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/s13075-017-1251-y Text en © The Author(s). 2017 Open AccessThis article is distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/), which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided you give appropriate credit to the original author(s) and the source, provide a link to the Creative Commons license, and indicate if changes were made. The Creative Commons Public Domain Dedication waiver (http://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/) applies to the data made available in this article, unless otherwise stated.
spellingShingle Research Article
Curtis, Jeffrey R.
Chen, Lang
Higginbotham, Phillip
Nowell, W. Benjamin
Gal-Levy, Ronit
Willig, James
Safford, Monika
Coe, Joseph
O’Hara, Kaitlin
Sa’adon, Roee
Social media for arthritis-related comparative effectiveness and safety research and the impact of direct-to-consumer advertising
title Social media for arthritis-related comparative effectiveness and safety research and the impact of direct-to-consumer advertising
title_full Social media for arthritis-related comparative effectiveness and safety research and the impact of direct-to-consumer advertising
title_fullStr Social media for arthritis-related comparative effectiveness and safety research and the impact of direct-to-consumer advertising
title_full_unstemmed Social media for arthritis-related comparative effectiveness and safety research and the impact of direct-to-consumer advertising
title_short Social media for arthritis-related comparative effectiveness and safety research and the impact of direct-to-consumer advertising
title_sort social media for arthritis-related comparative effectiveness and safety research and the impact of direct-to-consumer advertising
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5341200/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/28270190
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/s13075-017-1251-y
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