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Exploiting heterogeneous publicly available data sources for drug safety surveillance: computational framework and case studies

Version 2 2016-12-06, 12:54
Version 1 2016-12-05, 15:42
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posted on 2016-12-06, 12:54 authored by Vassilis G. Koutkias, Agnès Lillo-Le Louët, Marie-Christine Jaulent

Objective: Driven by the need of pharmacovigilance centres and companies to routinely collect and review all available data about adverse drug reactions (ADRs) and adverse events of interest, we introduce and validate a computational framework exploiting dominant as well as emerging publicly available data sources for drug safety surveillance.

Methods: Our approach relies on appropriate query formulation for data acquisition and subsequent filtering, transformation and joint visualization of the obtained data. We acquired data from the FDA Adverse Event Reporting System (FAERS), PubMed and Twitter. In order to assess the validity and the robustness of the approach, we elaborated on two important case studies, namely, clozapine-induced cardiomyopathy/myocarditis versus haloperidol-induced cardiomyopathy/myocarditis, and apixaban-induced cerebral hemorrhage.

Results: The analysis of the obtained data provided interesting insights (identification of potential patient and health-care professional experiences regarding ADRs in Twitter, information/arguments against an ADR existence across all sources), while illustrating the benefits (complementing data from multiple sources to strengthen/confirm evidence) and the underlying challenges (selecting search terms, data presentation) of exploiting heterogeneous information sources, thereby advocating the need for the proposed framework.

Conclusions: This work contributes in establishing a continuous learning system for drug safety surveillance by exploiting heterogeneous publicly available data sources via appropriate support tools.

Funding

This research was supported by a Marie Curie Intra European Fellowship project awarded to the corresponding author within the 7th European Community Framework Programme FP7/2007-2013 under REA grant agreement 330422 – the SAFER project.

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