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Application of Natural Language Processing and Network Analysis Techniques to Post-market Reports for the Evaluation of Dose-related Anti-Thymocyte Globulin Safety Patterns

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OBJECTIVE To evaluate the feasibility of automated dose and adverse event information retrieval in supporting the identification of safety patterns. METHODS We extracted all rabbit Anti-Thymocyte Globulin (rATG) reports submitted… Click to show full abstract

OBJECTIVE To evaluate the feasibility of automated dose and adverse event information retrieval in supporting the identification of safety patterns. METHODS We extracted all rabbit Anti-Thymocyte Globulin (rATG) reports submitted to the United States Food and Drug Administration Adverse Event Reporting System (FAERS) from the product's initial licensure in April 16, 1984 through February 8, 2016. We processed the narratives using the Medication Extraction (MedEx) and the Event-based Text-mining of Health Electronic Records (ETHER) systems and retrieved the appropriate medication, clinical, and temporal information. When necessary, the extracted information was manually curated. This process resulted in a high quality dataset that was analyzed with the Pattern-based and Advanced Network Analyzer for Clinical Evaluation and Assessment (PANACEA) to explore the association of rATG dosing with post-transplant lymphoproliferative disorder (PTLD). RESULTS Although manual curation was necessary to improve the data quality, MedEx and ETHER supported the extraction of the appropriate information. We created a final dataset of 1,380 cases with complete information for rATG dosing and date of administration. Analysis in PANACEA found that PTLD was associated with cumulative doses of rATG >8 mg/kg, even in periods where most of the submissions to FAERS reported low doses of rATG. CONCLUSION We demonstrated the feasibility of investigating a dose-related safety pattern for a particular product in FAERS using a set of automated tools.

Keywords: anti thymocyte; information; dose related; thymocyte globulin; safety; safety patterns

Journal Title: Applied clinical informatics
Year Published: 2017

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