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Methods to Compare Adverse Events in Twitter to FAERS, Drug Information Databases, and Systematic Reviews: Proof of Concept with Adalimumab
by
Loke, Yoon
, Sarker, Abeed
, O’Connor, Karen
, Smith, Karen
, Golder, Su
, Gonzalez-Hernandez, Graciela
in
Anxiety
/ Crohn's disease
/ Digital media
/ Drug Safety and Pharmacovigilance
/ FDA approval
/ Immunotherapy
/ Inflammatory bowel disease
/ Information systems
/ Medicine
/ Medicine & Public Health
/ Monoclonal antibodies
/ Mortality
/ Original
/ Original Research Article
/ Patients
/ Pharmacology/Toxicology
/ Rheumatoid arthritis
/ Side effects
/ Social networks
/ Systematic review
/ TNF inhibitors
2018
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Methods to Compare Adverse Events in Twitter to FAERS, Drug Information Databases, and Systematic Reviews: Proof of Concept with Adalimumab
by
Loke, Yoon
, Sarker, Abeed
, O’Connor, Karen
, Smith, Karen
, Golder, Su
, Gonzalez-Hernandez, Graciela
in
Anxiety
/ Crohn's disease
/ Digital media
/ Drug Safety and Pharmacovigilance
/ FDA approval
/ Immunotherapy
/ Inflammatory bowel disease
/ Information systems
/ Medicine
/ Medicine & Public Health
/ Monoclonal antibodies
/ Mortality
/ Original
/ Original Research Article
/ Patients
/ Pharmacology/Toxicology
/ Rheumatoid arthritis
/ Side effects
/ Social networks
/ Systematic review
/ TNF inhibitors
2018
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While trying to remove the title from your shelf something went wrong :( Kindly try again later!
Do you wish to request the book?
Methods to Compare Adverse Events in Twitter to FAERS, Drug Information Databases, and Systematic Reviews: Proof of Concept with Adalimumab
by
Loke, Yoon
, Sarker, Abeed
, O’Connor, Karen
, Smith, Karen
, Golder, Su
, Gonzalez-Hernandez, Graciela
in
Anxiety
/ Crohn's disease
/ Digital media
/ Drug Safety and Pharmacovigilance
/ FDA approval
/ Immunotherapy
/ Inflammatory bowel disease
/ Information systems
/ Medicine
/ Medicine & Public Health
/ Monoclonal antibodies
/ Mortality
/ Original
/ Original Research Article
/ Patients
/ Pharmacology/Toxicology
/ Rheumatoid arthritis
/ Side effects
/ Social networks
/ Systematic review
/ TNF inhibitors
2018
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Methods to Compare Adverse Events in Twitter to FAERS, Drug Information Databases, and Systematic Reviews: Proof of Concept with Adalimumab
Journal Article
Methods to Compare Adverse Events in Twitter to FAERS, Drug Information Databases, and Systematic Reviews: Proof of Concept with Adalimumab
2018
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Overview
Introduction
Adverse drug reactions (ADRs) are associated with significant health-related and financial burden, and multiple sources are currently utilized to actively discover them. Social media has been proposed as a potential resource for monitoring ADRs, but drug-specific analytical studies comparing social media with other sources are scarce.
Objectives
Our objective was to develop methods to compare ADRs mentioned in social media with those in traditional sources: the US FDA Adverse Event Reporting System (FAERS), drug information databases (DIDs), and systematic reviews.
Methods
A total of 10,188 tweets mentioning adalimumab collected between June 2014 and August 2016 were included. ADRs in the corpus were extracted semi-automatically and manually mapped to standardized concepts in the Unified Medical Language System. ADRs were grouped into 16 biologic categories for comparisons. Frequencies, relative frequencies, disproportionality analyses, and rank ordering were used as metrics.
Results
There was moderate agreement between ADRs in social media and traditional sources. “Local and injection site reactions” was the top ADR in Twitter, DIDs, and systematic reviews by frequency, ranked frequency, and index ranking. The next highest ADR in Twitter—fatigue—ranked fifth and seventh in FAERS and DIDs.
Conclusion
Social media posts often express mild and symptomatic ADRs, but rates are measured differently in scientific sources. ADRs in FAERS are reported as absolute numbers, in DIDs as percentages, and in systematic reviews as percentages, risk ratios, or other metrics, which makes comparisons challenging; however, overlap is substantial. Social media analysis facilitates open-ended investigation of patient perspectives and may reveal concepts (e.g. anxiety) not available in traditional sources.
Publisher
Springer International Publishing,Springer Nature B.V
Subject
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