| Literature DB >> 26630915 |
Arianna Dagliati1, Andrea Marinoni2, Carlo Cerra3, Pasquale Decata4, Luca Chiovato4, Paolo Gamba2, Riccardo Bellazzi5.
Abstract
A very interesting perspective of "big data" in diabetes management stands in the integration of environmental information with data gathered for clinical and administrative purposes, to increase the capability of understanding spatial and temporal patterns of diseases. Within the MOSAIC project, funded by the European Union with the goal to design new diabetes analytics, we have jointly analyzed a clinical-administrative dataset of nearly 1.000 type 2 diabetes patients with environmental information derived from air quality maps acquired from remote sensing (satellite) data. Within this context we have adopted a general analysis framework able to deal with a large variety of temporal, geo-localized data. Thanks to the exploitation of time series analysis and satellite images processing, we studied whether glycemic control showed seasonal variations and if they have a spatiotemporal correlation with air pollution maps. We observed a link between the seasonal trends of glycated hemoglobin and air pollution in some of the considered geographic areas. Such findings will need future investigations for further confirmation. This work shows that it is possible to successfully deal with big data by implementing new analytics and how their exploration may provide new scenarios to better understand clinical phenomena.Entities:
Keywords: big data; data analytics; data integration; diabetes mellitus; environmental data; remote sensing
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Year: 2015 PMID: 26630915 PMCID: PMC4738227 DOI: 10.1177/1932296815619180
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Diabetes Sci Technol ISSN: 1932-2968