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Pharmacological risk factors associated with hospital readmission rates in a psychiatric cohort identified using prescriptome data mining

BACKGROUND: Worldwide, over 14% of individuals hospitalized for psychiatric reasons have readmissions to hospitals within 30 days after discharge. Predicting patients at risk and leveraging accelerated interventions can reduce the rates of early readmission, a negative clinical outcome (i.e., a trea...

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Autores principales: Shameer, Khader, Perez-Rodriguez, M. Mercedes, Bachar, Roy, Li, Li, Johnson, Amy, Johnson, Kipp W., Glicksberg, Benjamin S., Smith, Milo R., Readhead, Ben, Scarpa, Joseph, Jebakaran, Jebakumar, Kovatch, Patricia, Lim, Sabina, Goodman, Wayne, Reich, David L., Kasarskis, Andrew, Tatonetti, Nicholas P., Dudley, Joel T.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: BioMed Central 2018
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6156906/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/30255805
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/s12911-018-0653-3
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author Shameer, Khader
Perez-Rodriguez, M. Mercedes
Bachar, Roy
Li, Li
Johnson, Amy
Johnson, Kipp W.
Glicksberg, Benjamin S.
Smith, Milo R.
Readhead, Ben
Scarpa, Joseph
Jebakaran, Jebakumar
Kovatch, Patricia
Lim, Sabina
Goodman, Wayne
Reich, David L.
Kasarskis, Andrew
Tatonetti, Nicholas P.
Dudley, Joel T.
author_facet Shameer, Khader
Perez-Rodriguez, M. Mercedes
Bachar, Roy
Li, Li
Johnson, Amy
Johnson, Kipp W.
Glicksberg, Benjamin S.
Smith, Milo R.
Readhead, Ben
Scarpa, Joseph
Jebakaran, Jebakumar
Kovatch, Patricia
Lim, Sabina
Goodman, Wayne
Reich, David L.
Kasarskis, Andrew
Tatonetti, Nicholas P.
Dudley, Joel T.
author_sort Shameer, Khader
collection PubMed
description BACKGROUND: Worldwide, over 14% of individuals hospitalized for psychiatric reasons have readmissions to hospitals within 30 days after discharge. Predicting patients at risk and leveraging accelerated interventions can reduce the rates of early readmission, a negative clinical outcome (i.e., a treatment failure) that affects the quality of life of patient. To implement individualized interventions, it is necessary to predict those individuals at highest risk for 30-day readmission. In this study, our aim was to conduct a data-driven investigation to find the pharmacological factors influencing 30-day all-cause, intra- and interdepartmental readmissions after an index psychiatric admission, using the compendium of prescription data (prescriptome) from electronic medical records (EMR). METHODS: The data scientists in the project received a deidentified database from the Mount Sinai Data Warehouse, which was used to perform all analyses. Data was stored in a secured MySQL database, normalized and indexed using a unique hexadecimal identifier associated with the data for psychiatric illness visits. We used Bayesian logistic regression models to evaluate the association of prescription data with 30-day readmission risk. We constructed individual models and compiled results after adjusting for covariates, including drug exposure, age, and gender. We also performed digital comorbidity survey using EMR data combined with the estimation of shared genetic architecture using genomic annotations to disease phenotypes. RESULTS: Using an automated, data-driven approach, we identified prescription medications, side effects (primary side effects), and drug-drug interaction-induced side effects (secondary side effects) associated with readmission risk in a cohort of 1275 patients using prescriptome analytics. In our study, we identified 28 drugs associated with risk for readmission among psychiatric patients. Based on prescription data, Pravastatin had the highest risk of readmission (OR = 13.10; 95% CI (2.82, 60.8)). We also identified enrichment of primary side effects (n = 4006) and secondary side effects (n = 36) induced by prescription drugs in the subset of readmitted patients (n = 89) compared to the non-readmitted subgroup (n = 1186). Digital comorbidity analyses and shared genetic analyses further reveals that cardiovascular disease and psychiatric conditions are comorbid and share functional gene modules (cardiomyopathy and anxiety disorder: shared genes (n = 37; P = 1.06815E-06)). CONCLUSIONS: Large scale prescriptome data is now available from EMRs and accessible for analytics that could improve healthcare outcomes. Such analyses could also drive hypothesis and data-driven research. In this study, we explored the utility of prescriptome data to identify factors driving readmission in a psychiatric cohort. Converging digital health data from EMRs and systems biology investigations reveal a subset of patient populations that have significant comorbidities with cardiovascular diseases are more likely to be readmitted. Further, the genetic architecture of psychiatric illness also suggests overlap with cardiovascular diseases. In summary, assessment of medications, side effects, and drug-drug interactions in a clinical setting as well as genomic information using a data mining approach could help to find factors that could help to lower readmission rates in patients with mental illness.
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spelling pubmed-61569062018-09-27 Pharmacological risk factors associated with hospital readmission rates in a psychiatric cohort identified using prescriptome data mining Shameer, Khader Perez-Rodriguez, M. Mercedes Bachar, Roy Li, Li Johnson, Amy Johnson, Kipp W. Glicksberg, Benjamin S. Smith, Milo R. Readhead, Ben Scarpa, Joseph Jebakaran, Jebakumar Kovatch, Patricia Lim, Sabina Goodman, Wayne Reich, David L. Kasarskis, Andrew Tatonetti, Nicholas P. Dudley, Joel T. BMC Med Inform Decis Mak Research BACKGROUND: Worldwide, over 14% of individuals hospitalized for psychiatric reasons have readmissions to hospitals within 30 days after discharge. Predicting patients at risk and leveraging accelerated interventions can reduce the rates of early readmission, a negative clinical outcome (i.e., a treatment failure) that affects the quality of life of patient. To implement individualized interventions, it is necessary to predict those individuals at highest risk for 30-day readmission. In this study, our aim was to conduct a data-driven investigation to find the pharmacological factors influencing 30-day all-cause, intra- and interdepartmental readmissions after an index psychiatric admission, using the compendium of prescription data (prescriptome) from electronic medical records (EMR). METHODS: The data scientists in the project received a deidentified database from the Mount Sinai Data Warehouse, which was used to perform all analyses. Data was stored in a secured MySQL database, normalized and indexed using a unique hexadecimal identifier associated with the data for psychiatric illness visits. We used Bayesian logistic regression models to evaluate the association of prescription data with 30-day readmission risk. We constructed individual models and compiled results after adjusting for covariates, including drug exposure, age, and gender. We also performed digital comorbidity survey using EMR data combined with the estimation of shared genetic architecture using genomic annotations to disease phenotypes. RESULTS: Using an automated, data-driven approach, we identified prescription medications, side effects (primary side effects), and drug-drug interaction-induced side effects (secondary side effects) associated with readmission risk in a cohort of 1275 patients using prescriptome analytics. In our study, we identified 28 drugs associated with risk for readmission among psychiatric patients. Based on prescription data, Pravastatin had the highest risk of readmission (OR = 13.10; 95% CI (2.82, 60.8)). We also identified enrichment of primary side effects (n = 4006) and secondary side effects (n = 36) induced by prescription drugs in the subset of readmitted patients (n = 89) compared to the non-readmitted subgroup (n = 1186). Digital comorbidity analyses and shared genetic analyses further reveals that cardiovascular disease and psychiatric conditions are comorbid and share functional gene modules (cardiomyopathy and anxiety disorder: shared genes (n = 37; P = 1.06815E-06)). CONCLUSIONS: Large scale prescriptome data is now available from EMRs and accessible for analytics that could improve healthcare outcomes. Such analyses could also drive hypothesis and data-driven research. In this study, we explored the utility of prescriptome data to identify factors driving readmission in a psychiatric cohort. Converging digital health data from EMRs and systems biology investigations reveal a subset of patient populations that have significant comorbidities with cardiovascular diseases are more likely to be readmitted. Further, the genetic architecture of psychiatric illness also suggests overlap with cardiovascular diseases. In summary, assessment of medications, side effects, and drug-drug interactions in a clinical setting as well as genomic information using a data mining approach could help to find factors that could help to lower readmission rates in patients with mental illness. BioMed Central 2018-09-14 /pmc/articles/PMC6156906/ /pubmed/30255805 http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/s12911-018-0653-3 Text en © The Author(s). 2018 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
Shameer, Khader
Perez-Rodriguez, M. Mercedes
Bachar, Roy
Li, Li
Johnson, Amy
Johnson, Kipp W.
Glicksberg, Benjamin S.
Smith, Milo R.
Readhead, Ben
Scarpa, Joseph
Jebakaran, Jebakumar
Kovatch, Patricia
Lim, Sabina
Goodman, Wayne
Reich, David L.
Kasarskis, Andrew
Tatonetti, Nicholas P.
Dudley, Joel T.
Pharmacological risk factors associated with hospital readmission rates in a psychiatric cohort identified using prescriptome data mining
title Pharmacological risk factors associated with hospital readmission rates in a psychiatric cohort identified using prescriptome data mining
title_full Pharmacological risk factors associated with hospital readmission rates in a psychiatric cohort identified using prescriptome data mining
title_fullStr Pharmacological risk factors associated with hospital readmission rates in a psychiatric cohort identified using prescriptome data mining
title_full_unstemmed Pharmacological risk factors associated with hospital readmission rates in a psychiatric cohort identified using prescriptome data mining
title_short Pharmacological risk factors associated with hospital readmission rates in a psychiatric cohort identified using prescriptome data mining
title_sort pharmacological risk factors associated with hospital readmission rates in a psychiatric cohort identified using prescriptome data mining
topic Research
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6156906/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/30255805
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/s12911-018-0653-3
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