Monitoring Potential Drug Interactions and Reactions via Network Analysis of Instagram User Timelines
Abstract
Much recent research aims to identify evidence for Drug-Drug Interactions (DDI) and Adverse Drug reactions (ADR) from the biomedical scientific literature. In addition to this "Bibliome", the universe of social media provides a very promising source of large-scale data that can help identify DDI and ADR in ways that have not been hitherto possible. Given the large number of users, analysis of social media data may be useful to identify under-reported, population-level pathology associated with DDI, thus further contributing to improvements in population health. Moreover, tapping into this data allows us to infer drug interactions with natural products--including cannabis--which constitute an array of DDI very poorly explored by biomedical research thus far. Our goal is to determine the potential of Instagram for public health monitoring and surveillance for DDI, ADR, and behavioral pathology at large. Using drug, symptom, and natural product dictionaries for identification of the various types of DDI and ADR evidence, we have collected ~7000 timelines. We report on 1) the development of a monitoring tool to easily observe user-level timelines associated with drug and symptom terms of interest, and 2) population-level behavior via the analysis of co-occurrence networks computed from user timelines at three different scales: monthly, weekly, and daily occurrences. Analysis of these networks further reveals 3) drug and symptom direct and indirect associations with greater support in user timelines, as well as 4) clusters of symptoms and drugs revealed by the collective behavior of the observed population. This demonstrates that Instagram contains much drug- and pathology specific data for public health monitoring of DDI and ADR, and that complex network analysis provides an important toolbox to extract health-related associations and their support from large-scale social media data.
- Publication:
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arXiv e-prints
- Pub Date:
- October 2015
- DOI:
- 10.48550/arXiv.1510.01006
- arXiv:
- arXiv:1510.01006
- Bibcode:
- 2015arXiv151001006B
- Keywords:
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- Computer Science - Social and Information Networks;
- Computer Science - Computers and Society;
- Computer Science - Information Retrieval;
- Quantitative Biology - Quantitative Methods;
- Statistics - Machine Learning
- E-Print:
- Pacific Symposium on Biocomputing. 21:492-503