Evaluating digital medicine ingestion data from seriously mentally ill patients with a Bayesian Hybrid Model.
Jonathan KnightsZahra HeidaryTimothy Peters-StricklandMurali RamanathanPublished in: NPJ digital medicine (2019)
The objective of this work was to adapt and evaluate the performance of a Bayesian hybrid model to characterize objective temporal medication ingestion parameters from two clinical studies in patients with serious mental illness (SMI) receiving treatment with a digital medicine system. This system provides a signal from an ingested sensor contained in the dosage form to a patient-worn patch and transmits this signal via the patient's mobile device. A previously developed hybrid Markov-von Mises model was used to obtain maximum-likelihood estimates for medication ingestion behavior parameters for individual patients. The individual parameter estimates were modeled to obtain distribution parameters of priors implemented in a Markov chain-Monte Carlo framework. Clinical and demographic covariates associated with model ingestion parameters were also assessed. We obtained individual estimates of overall observed ingestion percent (median:75.9%, range:18.2-98.3%, IQR:32.9%), rate of excess dosing events (median:0%, range:0-14.3%, IQR:3.0%) and observed ingestion duration. The modeling also provided estimates of the Markov-dependence probabilities of dosing success following a dosing success or failure. The ingestion-timing deviations were modeled with the von Mises distribution. A subset of 17 patients (22.1%) were identified as prompt correctors based on Markov-dependence probability of a dosing failure followed by a dosing success of unity. The prompt corrector sub-group had a better overall digital medicine ingestion parameter profile compared to those who were not prompt correctors. Our results demonstrate the potential utility of a Bayesian Hybrid Markov-von Mises model for characterizing digital medicine ingestion patterns in patients with SMI.
Keyphrases
- end stage renal disease
- mental illness
- ejection fraction
- chronic kidney disease
- newly diagnosed
- prognostic factors
- mental health
- emergency department
- case report
- machine learning
- electronic health record
- patient reported outcomes
- artificial intelligence
- big data
- patient reported
- human health
- adverse drug
- drug induced