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The Adverse Drug Reactions From Patient Reports in Social Media Project: Protocol for an Evaluation Against a Gold Standard

BACKGROUND: Social media is a potential source of information on postmarketing drug safety surveillance that still remains unexploited nowadays. Information technology solutions aiming at extracting adverse reactions (ADRs) from posts on health forums require a rigorous evaluation methodology if the...

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Autores principales: Arnoux-Guenegou, Armelle, Girardeau, Yannick, Chen, Xiaoyi, Deldossi, Myrtille, Aboukhamis, Rim, Faviez, Carole, Dahamna, Badisse, Karapetiantz, Pierre, Guillemin-Lanne, Sylvie, Lillo-Le Louët, Agnès, Texier, Nathalie, Burgun, Anita, Katsahian, Sandrine
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: JMIR Publications 2019
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6528435/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/31066711
http://dx.doi.org/10.2196/11448
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author Arnoux-Guenegou, Armelle
Girardeau, Yannick
Chen, Xiaoyi
Deldossi, Myrtille
Aboukhamis, Rim
Faviez, Carole
Dahamna, Badisse
Karapetiantz, Pierre
Guillemin-Lanne, Sylvie
Lillo-Le Louët, Agnès
Texier, Nathalie
Burgun, Anita
Katsahian, Sandrine
author_facet Arnoux-Guenegou, Armelle
Girardeau, Yannick
Chen, Xiaoyi
Deldossi, Myrtille
Aboukhamis, Rim
Faviez, Carole
Dahamna, Badisse
Karapetiantz, Pierre
Guillemin-Lanne, Sylvie
Lillo-Le Louët, Agnès
Texier, Nathalie
Burgun, Anita
Katsahian, Sandrine
author_sort Arnoux-Guenegou, Armelle
collection PubMed
description BACKGROUND: Social media is a potential source of information on postmarketing drug safety surveillance that still remains unexploited nowadays. Information technology solutions aiming at extracting adverse reactions (ADRs) from posts on health forums require a rigorous evaluation methodology if their results are to be used to make decisions. First, a gold standard, consisting of manual annotations of the ADR by human experts from the corpus extracted from social media, must be implemented and its quality must be assessed. Second, as for clinical research protocols, the sample size must rely on statistical arguments. Finally, the extraction methods must target the relation between the drug and the disease (which might be either treated or caused by the drug) rather than simple co-occurrences in the posts. OBJECTIVE: We propose a standardized protocol for the evaluation of a software extracting ADRs from the messages on health forums. The study is conducted as part of the Adverse Drug Reactions from Patient Reports in Social Media project. METHODS: Messages from French health forums were extracted. Entity recognition was based on Racine Pharma lexicon for drugs and Medical Dictionary for Regulatory Activities terminology for potential adverse events (AEs). Natural language processing–based techniques automated the ADR information extraction (relation between the drug and AE entities). The corpus of evaluation was a random sample of the messages containing drugs and/or AE concepts corresponding to recent pharmacovigilance alerts. A total of 2 persons experienced in medical terminology manually annotated the corpus, thus creating the gold standard, according to an annotator guideline. We will evaluate our tool against the gold standard with recall, precision, and f-measure. Interannotator agreement, reflecting gold standard quality, will be evaluated with hierarchical kappa. Granularities in the terminologies will be further explored. RESULTS: Necessary and sufficient sample size was calculated to ensure statistical confidence in the assessed results. As we expected a global recall of 0.5, we needed at least 384 identified ADR concepts to obtain a 95% CI with a total width of 0.10 around 0.5. The automated ADR information extraction in the corpus for evaluation is already finished. The 2 annotators already completed the annotation process. The analysis of the performance of the ADR information extraction module as compared with gold standard is ongoing. CONCLUSIONS: This protocol is based on the standardized statistical methods from clinical research to create the corpus, thus ensuring the necessary statistical power of the assessed results. Such evaluation methodology is required to make the ADR information extraction software useful for postmarketing drug safety surveillance. INTERNATIONAL REGISTERED REPORT IDENTIFIER (IRRID): RR1-10.2196/11448
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spelling pubmed-65284352019-06-07 The Adverse Drug Reactions From Patient Reports in Social Media Project: Protocol for an Evaluation Against a Gold Standard Arnoux-Guenegou, Armelle Girardeau, Yannick Chen, Xiaoyi Deldossi, Myrtille Aboukhamis, Rim Faviez, Carole Dahamna, Badisse Karapetiantz, Pierre Guillemin-Lanne, Sylvie Lillo-Le Louët, Agnès Texier, Nathalie Burgun, Anita Katsahian, Sandrine JMIR Res Protoc Protocol BACKGROUND: Social media is a potential source of information on postmarketing drug safety surveillance that still remains unexploited nowadays. Information technology solutions aiming at extracting adverse reactions (ADRs) from posts on health forums require a rigorous evaluation methodology if their results are to be used to make decisions. First, a gold standard, consisting of manual annotations of the ADR by human experts from the corpus extracted from social media, must be implemented and its quality must be assessed. Second, as for clinical research protocols, the sample size must rely on statistical arguments. Finally, the extraction methods must target the relation between the drug and the disease (which might be either treated or caused by the drug) rather than simple co-occurrences in the posts. OBJECTIVE: We propose a standardized protocol for the evaluation of a software extracting ADRs from the messages on health forums. The study is conducted as part of the Adverse Drug Reactions from Patient Reports in Social Media project. METHODS: Messages from French health forums were extracted. Entity recognition was based on Racine Pharma lexicon for drugs and Medical Dictionary for Regulatory Activities terminology for potential adverse events (AEs). Natural language processing–based techniques automated the ADR information extraction (relation between the drug and AE entities). The corpus of evaluation was a random sample of the messages containing drugs and/or AE concepts corresponding to recent pharmacovigilance alerts. A total of 2 persons experienced in medical terminology manually annotated the corpus, thus creating the gold standard, according to an annotator guideline. We will evaluate our tool against the gold standard with recall, precision, and f-measure. Interannotator agreement, reflecting gold standard quality, will be evaluated with hierarchical kappa. Granularities in the terminologies will be further explored. RESULTS: Necessary and sufficient sample size was calculated to ensure statistical confidence in the assessed results. As we expected a global recall of 0.5, we needed at least 384 identified ADR concepts to obtain a 95% CI with a total width of 0.10 around 0.5. The automated ADR information extraction in the corpus for evaluation is already finished. The 2 annotators already completed the annotation process. The analysis of the performance of the ADR information extraction module as compared with gold standard is ongoing. CONCLUSIONS: This protocol is based on the standardized statistical methods from clinical research to create the corpus, thus ensuring the necessary statistical power of the assessed results. Such evaluation methodology is required to make the ADR information extraction software useful for postmarketing drug safety surveillance. INTERNATIONAL REGISTERED REPORT IDENTIFIER (IRRID): RR1-10.2196/11448 JMIR Publications 2019-05-07 /pmc/articles/PMC6528435/ /pubmed/31066711 http://dx.doi.org/10.2196/11448 Text en ©Armelle Arnoux-Guenegou, Yannick Girardeau, Xiaoyi Chen, Myrtille Deldossi, Rim Aboukhamis, Carole Faviez, Badisse Dahamna, Pierre Karapetiantz, Sylvie Guillemin-Lanne, Agnès Lillo-Le Louët, Nathalie Texier, Anita Burgun, Sandrine Katsahian. Originally published in JMIR Research Protocols (http://www.researchprotocols.org), 07.05.2019. 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 JMIR Research Protocols, is properly cited. The complete bibliographic information, a link to the original publication on http://www.researchprotocols.org, as well as this copyright and license information must be included.
spellingShingle Protocol
Arnoux-Guenegou, Armelle
Girardeau, Yannick
Chen, Xiaoyi
Deldossi, Myrtille
Aboukhamis, Rim
Faviez, Carole
Dahamna, Badisse
Karapetiantz, Pierre
Guillemin-Lanne, Sylvie
Lillo-Le Louët, Agnès
Texier, Nathalie
Burgun, Anita
Katsahian, Sandrine
The Adverse Drug Reactions From Patient Reports in Social Media Project: Protocol for an Evaluation Against a Gold Standard
title The Adverse Drug Reactions From Patient Reports in Social Media Project: Protocol for an Evaluation Against a Gold Standard
title_full The Adverse Drug Reactions From Patient Reports in Social Media Project: Protocol for an Evaluation Against a Gold Standard
title_fullStr The Adverse Drug Reactions From Patient Reports in Social Media Project: Protocol for an Evaluation Against a Gold Standard
title_full_unstemmed The Adverse Drug Reactions From Patient Reports in Social Media Project: Protocol for an Evaluation Against a Gold Standard
title_short The Adverse Drug Reactions From Patient Reports in Social Media Project: Protocol for an Evaluation Against a Gold Standard
title_sort adverse drug reactions from patient reports in social media project: protocol for an evaluation against a gold standard
topic Protocol
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6528435/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/31066711
http://dx.doi.org/10.2196/11448
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