Precision psychiatry: predicting predictability.
Edwin van DellenPublished in: Psychological medicine (2024)
Precision psychiatry is an emerging field that aims to provide individualized approaches to mental health care. An important strategy to achieve this precision is to reduce uncertainty about prognosis and treatment response. Multivariate analysis and machine learning are used to create outcome prediction models based on clinical data such as demographics, symptom assessments, genetic information, and brain imaging. While much emphasis has been placed on technical innovation, the complex and varied nature of mental health presents significant challenges to the successful implementation of these models. From this perspective, I review ten challenges in the field of precision psychiatry, including the need for studies on real-world populations and realistic clinical outcome definitions, and consideration of treatment-related factors such as placebo effects and non-adherence to prescriptions. Fairness, prospective validation in comparison to current practice and implementation studies of prediction models are other key issues that are currently understudied. A shift is proposed from retrospective studies based on linear and static concepts of disease towards prospective research that considers the importance of contextual factors and the dynamic and complex nature of mental health.
Keyphrases
- mental health
- primary care
- machine learning
- healthcare
- case control
- quality improvement
- big data
- high resolution
- mental illness
- type diabetes
- multiple sclerosis
- randomized controlled trial
- data analysis
- white matter
- artificial intelligence
- skeletal muscle
- metabolic syndrome
- adipose tissue
- dna methylation
- copy number
- photodynamic therapy
- insulin resistance
- neural network
- glycemic control
- combination therapy
- phase iii