» Articles » PMID: 32470056

A Framework to Build Similarity-based Cohorts for Personalized Treatment Advice - a Standardized, but Flexible Workflow with the R Package SimBaCo

Overview
Journal PLoS One
Date 2020 May 30
PMID 32470056
Citations 3
Authors
Affiliations
Soon will be listed here.
Abstract

Along with increasing amounts of big data sources and increasing computer performance, real-world evidence from such sources likewise gains in importance. While this mostly applies to population averaged results from analyses based on the all available data, it is also possible to conduct so-called personalized analyses based on a data subset whose observations resemble a particular patient for whom a decision is to be made. Claims data from statutory health insurance companies could provide necessary information for such personalized analyses. To derive treatment recommendations from them for a particular patient in everyday care, an automated, reproducible and efficiently programmed workflow would be required. We introduce the R-package SimBaCo (Similarity-Based Cohort generation) offering a simple, but modular, and intuitive framework for this task. With the six built-in R-functions, this framework allows the user to create similarity cohorts tailored to the characteristics of particular patients. An exemplary workflow illustrates the distinct steps beginning with an initial cohort selection according to inclusion and exclusion criteria. A plotting function facilitates investigating a particular patient's characteristics relative to their distribution in a reference cohort, for example the initial cohort or the precision cohort after the data has been trimmed in accordance with chosen variables for similarity finding. Such precision cohorts allow any form of personalized analysis, for example personalized analyses of comparative effectiveness or customized prediction models developed from precision cohorts. In our exemplary workflow, we provide such a treatment comparison whereupon a treatment decision for a particular patient could be made. This is only one field of application where personalized results can directly support the process of clinical reasoning by leveraging information from individual patient data. With this modular package at hand, personalized studies can efficiently weight benefits and risks of treatment options of particular patients.

Citing Articles

Can Machine Learning from Real-World Data Support Drug Treatment Decisions? A Prediction Modeling Case for Direct Oral Anticoagulants.

Meid A, Wirbka L, Groll A, Haefeli W Med Decis Making. 2021; 42(5):587-598.

PMID: 34911402 PMC: 9189725. DOI: 10.1177/0272989X211064604.


Personalized treatment options for chronic diseases using precision cohort analytics.

Ng K, Kartoun U, Stavropoulos H, Zambrano J, Tang P Sci Rep. 2021; 11(1):1139.

PMID: 33441956 PMC: 7806725. DOI: 10.1038/s41598-021-80967-5.


Using the Causal Inference Framework to Support Individualized Drug Treatment Decisions Based on Observational Healthcare Data.

Meid A, Ruff C, Wirbka L, Stoll F, Seidling H, Groll A Clin Epidemiol. 2020; 12:1223-1234.

PMID: 33173350 PMC: 7646479. DOI: 10.2147/CLEP.S274466.

References
1.
Sacristan J, Dilla T . No big data without small data: learning health care systems begin and end with the individual patient. J Eval Clin Pract. 2015; 21(6):1014-7. PMC: 6680345. DOI: 10.1111/jep.12350. View

2.
Lamont A, Lyons M, Jaki T, Stuart E, Feaster D, Tharmaratnam K . Identification of predicted individual treatment effects in randomized clinical trials. Stat Methods Med Res. 2016; 27(1):142-157. DOI: 10.1177/0962280215623981. View

3.
DeVoe J, Gold R, McIntire P, Puro J, Chauvie S, Gallia C . Electronic health records vs Medicaid claims: completeness of diabetes preventive care data in community health centers. Ann Fam Med. 2011; 9(4):351-8. PMC: 3133583. DOI: 10.1370/afm.1279. View

4.
Jiang X, Wells A, Brufsky A, Neapolitan R . A clinical decision support system learned from data to personalize treatment recommendations towards preventing breast cancer metastasis. PLoS One. 2019; 14(3):e0213292. PMC: 6407919. DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0213292. View

5.
Stein J, Lum F, Lee P, Rich 3rd W, Coleman A . Use of health care claims data to study patients with ophthalmologic conditions. Ophthalmology. 2014; 121(5):1134-41. PMC: 4012019. DOI: 10.1016/j.ophtha.2013.11.038. View