| Literature DB >> 30335805 |
Daswin De Silva1, Weranja Ranasinghe1,2, Tharindu Bandaragoda1, Achini Adikari1, Nishan Mills1, Lahiru Iddamalgoda1, Damminda Alahakoon1, Nathan Lawrentschuk2, Raj Persad3, Evgeny Osipov4, Richard Gray5, Damien Bolton2.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: A primary variant of social media, online support groups (OSG) extend beyond the standard definition to incorporate a dimension of advice, support and guidance for patients. OSG are complementary, yet significant adjunct to patient journeys. Machine learning and natural language processing techniques can be applied to these large volumes of unstructured text discussions accumulated in OSG for intelligent extraction of patient-reported demographics, behaviours, decisions, treatment, side effects and expressions of emotions. New insights from the fusion and synthesis of such diverse patient-reported information, as expressed throughout the patient journey from diagnosis to treatment and recovery, can contribute towards informed decision-making on personalized healthcare delivery and the development of healthcare policy guidelines. METHODS ANDEntities:
Mesh:
Year: 2018 PMID: 30335805 PMCID: PMC6193663 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0205855
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS One ISSN: 1932-6203 Impact factor: 3.240
Fig 1An anonymised sample (parts are omitted and rephrased to preserve privacy) of five posts by a prostate cancer patient.
The highlighted excerpts are demographic, clinical, emotion expressions and decision make process related information, stated in the form of free-text.
The patient distribution (inclusion criteria met) across the ten selected OSG.
| Online support groups (OSG) | URL | n (% in total) |
|---|---|---|
| Healingwell | 2520 (39.0) | |
| Cancerforums | 873 (13.5) | |
| Cancer Survivors Network | csn.cancer.org/forum | 810 (12.5) |
| Healthboards | 429 (6.6) | |
| Prostatecancerinfolink | prostatecancerinfolink.ning.com/forum | 396 (6.1) |
| Cancercompass | 356 (5.5) | |
| Prostatecanceruk | community.prostatecanceruk.org | 308 (4.8) |
| Patientinfo | patient.info/forums | 299 (4.6) |
| Ustoo | 236 (3.7) | |
| Macmillanuk | community.macmillan.org.uk | 230 (3.6) |
Fig 2Structural and functional elements of the PRIME framework.
Sample terms for template decision making terms.
| Template term | Candidate sample terms |
|---|---|
| Decide | decided, chosen, wind up going, made the call, settled, opted, went for, took the option, end up |
| Recommend | recommend, recommended, prescribe, prescribed, advised, advise, endorse, endorsed, advocate |
| Doctor | doctor, doc, surgeon, urologist, uro, specialist, consultant, radiologist, oncologist, radiotherapist |
| Treatment | Surgery: surgery, davinci, da vinci, robotic, prostatectomy, ralp, rrp, lrp, rpp, key hole, open op |
| Radiation: radiation, imrt, brachytherapy, radiotherapy, seed therapy, brachy, seed implant, ebrt | |
| Surveillance: surveillance, AS, watch and wait, |
Fig 3The proposed technique for emotion extraction.
Emotion categories and a sample of representative terms used for each emotion.
| Emotion | Emotion terms from thesaurus | Emotion terms extracted by proposed technique |
|---|---|---|
| Happy | happy, great, joyous, glad, delighted | fab, chuffed, terrific, great news, looking forward, heart warming, uplifting, upbeat |
| Good | good, pleased, comfortable, relaxed, content | comfy, nice, chill, chipper, ok, okay, clear headed, cool |
| Alive | alive, playful, energetic, spirited, animated | chatty, perky, sociable, vibrant, vivacious, witty, easy going, peppy |
| Love | love, attracted, warm, passionate, affectionate | romantic, cuddly, compassionate, intimate, adore, supportive, caring |
| Positive | positive, eager, keen, bold, brave | smart, ambitious, proactive, cynical, insistent, willing, upbeat |
| Open | open, understanding, accepting, satisfied, receptive | open minded, empathetic, cooperative, accommodating, approachable, forgiving, attuned, rational |
| Interested | interested, fascinated, inquisitive, curious, intrigued | keen, impressed, cautious, leery, eager, intuitive, savvy, thoughtful |
| Strong | strong, certain, dynamic, sure, tenacious | resilient, independent, adamant, fierce, self reliant, decisive, fighter, pragmatic |
| Sad | sad, tearful, grief, sorrowful, grief | heart break, teary, lonely, weepy, crying, despairing, hurtful |
| Afraid | afraid, fearful, terrified, panic, worry | petrified, freaking out, apprehensive, dread, obsess, fret, nervous wreck |
| Hurt | hurt, deprived, pained, dejected, agonised | traumatised, bruised, shattered, ached, exhausted, cramped, numb, fatigued, strained |
| Angry | angry, annoy, provoke, aggressive, enraged | agitated, hostile, pissed off, argumentative, aggressive, rude, paranoid, ticked off, lashing out |
| Depressed | depressed, disappointed, miserable, despair, powerless | despondent, distraught, suicidal, unloved, worthless, emotionally drained, snappy |
| Helpless | helpless, incapable, alone, vulnerable, fatigued | insecure, tired, hopeless, powerless, defeated, overwhelmed, listless, incapacitated |
| Confused | confused, upset, doubtful, uncertain, hesitant | unsure, perplexed, wary, leery freaked out, iffy, bummed, taken aback |
| Indifferent | indifferent, insensitive, dull, reserved, lifeless | grumpy, apathetic, blunt, ignorant, emotionless, callous, crass, standoffish |
Fig 4PRIME extracts multiple modalities of information individually for each patient from OSG discussions.
This individual information is grouped into corresponding decision-making behaviour; Paternalistic, Autonomous and Shared groups by (a) patient age, (b) Gleason score and (c) treatment type. PRIME further generates aggregated trajectories for multiple temporal aspects of each decision-making behaviour group, before and after the decision, (d) number of patients engaged in OSG discussions, (e) average number of posts and (f) average percentage of posts containing advice by each group. The decision point is indicated by dotted vertical line in d-f.
Fig 5Key decision factors for PCa patients, in terms of (a) decision-making behaviour groups (b) treatment modality and (c) age groups.
In (a) and (b), p-values were calculated for statistical significance.
Fig 6OSG provide insights into emotional journeys of patients making an intimate decision of selecting a treatment type following the diagnosis of cancer, (a) aggregated positive emotion over time, (b) aggregated negative emotion over time as well as relative strength of each distinct emotion by behaviour group, age group, treatment option, for positive emotions (c) and negative emotions (d).
Fig 7PRIME extracts and associates side effects mentioned and discussed on OSG with all other aspects of extracted patient information to generate trajectories for behaviour groups (a) urinary side effects, (b) sexual side effects, (c) bowel side effects and (d) other side effects. Further illustrated (e) side effects by treatment options, (f) side effects by age groups and (g) the general composition of other side effects.