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Optimizing Existing Mental Health Screening Methods in a Dementia Screening and Risk Factor App: Observational Machine Learning Study

BACKGROUND: Mindstep is an app that aims to improve dementia screening by assessing cognition and risk factors. It considers important clinical risk factors, including prodromal symptoms, mental health disorders, and differential diagnoses of dementia. The 9-item Patient Health Questionnaire for dep...

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Autores principales: Kuleindiren, Narayan, Rifkin-Zybutz, Raphael Paul, Johal, Monika, Selim, Hamzah, Palmon, Itai, Lin, Aaron, Yu, Yizhou, Alim-Marvasti, Ali, Mahmud, Mohammad
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: JMIR Publications 2022
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8984825/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/35315786
http://dx.doi.org/10.2196/31209
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author Kuleindiren, Narayan
Rifkin-Zybutz, Raphael Paul
Johal, Monika
Selim, Hamzah
Palmon, Itai
Lin, Aaron
Yu, Yizhou
Alim-Marvasti, Ali
Mahmud, Mohammad
author_facet Kuleindiren, Narayan
Rifkin-Zybutz, Raphael Paul
Johal, Monika
Selim, Hamzah
Palmon, Itai
Lin, Aaron
Yu, Yizhou
Alim-Marvasti, Ali
Mahmud, Mohammad
author_sort Kuleindiren, Narayan
collection PubMed
description BACKGROUND: Mindstep is an app that aims to improve dementia screening by assessing cognition and risk factors. It considers important clinical risk factors, including prodromal symptoms, mental health disorders, and differential diagnoses of dementia. The 9-item Patient Health Questionnaire for depression (PHQ-9) and the 7-item Generalized Anxiety Disorder Scale (GAD-7) are widely validated and commonly used scales used in screening for depression and anxiety disorders, respectively. Shortened versions of both (PHQ-2/GAD-2) have been produced. OBJECTIVE: We sought to develop a method that maintained the brevity of these shorter questionnaires while maintaining the better precision of the original questionnaires. METHODS: Single questions were designed to encompass symptoms covered in the original questionnaires. Answers to these questions were combined with PHQ-2/GAD-2, and anonymized risk factors were collected by Mindset4Dementia from 2235 users. Machine learning models were trained to use these single questions in combination with data already collected by the app: age, response to a joke, and reporting of functional impairment to predict binary and continuous outcomes as measured using PHQ-9/GAD-7. Our model was developed with a training data set by using 10-fold cross-validation and a holdout testing data set and compared to results from using the shorter questionnaires (PHQ-2/GAD-2) alone to benchmark performance. RESULTS: We were able to achieve superior performance in predicting PHQ-9/GAD-7 screening cutoffs compared to PHQ-2 (difference in area under the curve 0.04, 95% CI 0.00-0.08, P=.02) but not GAD-2 (difference in area under the curve 0.00, 95% CI –0.02 to 0.03, P=.42). Regression models were able to accurately predict total questionnaire scores in PHQ-9 (R(2)=0.655, mean absolute error=2.267) and GAD-7 (R(2)=0.837, mean absolute error=1.780). CONCLUSIONS: We app-adapted PHQ-4 by adding brief summary questions about factors normally covered in the longer questionnaires. We additionally trained machine learning models that used the wide range of additional information already collected in Mindstep to make a short app-based screening tool for affective disorders, which appears to have superior or equivalent performance to well-established methods.
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spelling pubmed-89848252022-04-07 Optimizing Existing Mental Health Screening Methods in a Dementia Screening and Risk Factor App: Observational Machine Learning Study Kuleindiren, Narayan Rifkin-Zybutz, Raphael Paul Johal, Monika Selim, Hamzah Palmon, Itai Lin, Aaron Yu, Yizhou Alim-Marvasti, Ali Mahmud, Mohammad JMIR Form Res Original Paper BACKGROUND: Mindstep is an app that aims to improve dementia screening by assessing cognition and risk factors. It considers important clinical risk factors, including prodromal symptoms, mental health disorders, and differential diagnoses of dementia. The 9-item Patient Health Questionnaire for depression (PHQ-9) and the 7-item Generalized Anxiety Disorder Scale (GAD-7) are widely validated and commonly used scales used in screening for depression and anxiety disorders, respectively. Shortened versions of both (PHQ-2/GAD-2) have been produced. OBJECTIVE: We sought to develop a method that maintained the brevity of these shorter questionnaires while maintaining the better precision of the original questionnaires. METHODS: Single questions were designed to encompass symptoms covered in the original questionnaires. Answers to these questions were combined with PHQ-2/GAD-2, and anonymized risk factors were collected by Mindset4Dementia from 2235 users. Machine learning models were trained to use these single questions in combination with data already collected by the app: age, response to a joke, and reporting of functional impairment to predict binary and continuous outcomes as measured using PHQ-9/GAD-7. Our model was developed with a training data set by using 10-fold cross-validation and a holdout testing data set and compared to results from using the shorter questionnaires (PHQ-2/GAD-2) alone to benchmark performance. RESULTS: We were able to achieve superior performance in predicting PHQ-9/GAD-7 screening cutoffs compared to PHQ-2 (difference in area under the curve 0.04, 95% CI 0.00-0.08, P=.02) but not GAD-2 (difference in area under the curve 0.00, 95% CI –0.02 to 0.03, P=.42). Regression models were able to accurately predict total questionnaire scores in PHQ-9 (R(2)=0.655, mean absolute error=2.267) and GAD-7 (R(2)=0.837, mean absolute error=1.780). CONCLUSIONS: We app-adapted PHQ-4 by adding brief summary questions about factors normally covered in the longer questionnaires. We additionally trained machine learning models that used the wide range of additional information already collected in Mindstep to make a short app-based screening tool for affective disorders, which appears to have superior or equivalent performance to well-established methods. JMIR Publications 2022-03-22 /pmc/articles/PMC8984825/ /pubmed/35315786 http://dx.doi.org/10.2196/31209 Text en ©Narayan Kuleindiren, Raphael Paul Rifkin-Zybutz, Monika Johal, Hamzah Selim, Itai Palmon, Aaron Lin, Yizhou Yu, Ali Alim-Marvasti, Mohammad Mahmud. Originally published in JMIR Formative Research (https://formative.jmir.org), 22.03.2022. 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 Formative Research, is properly cited. The complete bibliographic information, a link to the original publication on https://formative.jmir.org, as well as this copyright and license information must be included.
spellingShingle Original Paper
Kuleindiren, Narayan
Rifkin-Zybutz, Raphael Paul
Johal, Monika
Selim, Hamzah
Palmon, Itai
Lin, Aaron
Yu, Yizhou
Alim-Marvasti, Ali
Mahmud, Mohammad
Optimizing Existing Mental Health Screening Methods in a Dementia Screening and Risk Factor App: Observational Machine Learning Study
title Optimizing Existing Mental Health Screening Methods in a Dementia Screening and Risk Factor App: Observational Machine Learning Study
title_full Optimizing Existing Mental Health Screening Methods in a Dementia Screening and Risk Factor App: Observational Machine Learning Study
title_fullStr Optimizing Existing Mental Health Screening Methods in a Dementia Screening and Risk Factor App: Observational Machine Learning Study
title_full_unstemmed Optimizing Existing Mental Health Screening Methods in a Dementia Screening and Risk Factor App: Observational Machine Learning Study
title_short Optimizing Existing Mental Health Screening Methods in a Dementia Screening and Risk Factor App: Observational Machine Learning Study
title_sort optimizing existing mental health screening methods in a dementia screening and risk factor app: observational machine learning study
topic Original Paper
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8984825/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/35315786
http://dx.doi.org/10.2196/31209
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