Abstract
Introduction
Prescription medication overdose is the fastest growing drug-related problem in the USA. The growing nature of this problem necessitates the implementation of improved monitoring strategies for investigating the prevalence and patterns of abuse of specific medications.
Objectives
Our primary aims were to assess the possibility of utilizing social media as a resource for automatic monitoring of prescription medication abuse and to devise an automatic classification technique that can identify potentially abuse-indicating user posts.
Methods
We collected Twitter user posts (tweets) associated with three commonly abused medications (Adderall®, oxycodone, and quetiapine). We manually annotated 6400 tweets mentioning these three medications and a control medication (metformin) that is not the subject of abuse due to its mechanism of action. We performed quantitative and qualitative analyses of the annotated data to determine whether posts on Twitter contain signals of prescription medication abuse. Finally, we designed an automatic supervised classification technique to distinguish posts containing signals of medication abuse from those that do not and assessed the utility of Twitter in investigating patterns of abuse over time.
Results
Our analyses show that clear signals of medication abuse can be drawn from Twitter posts and the percentage of tweets containing abuse signals are significantly higher for the three case medications (Adderall®: 23 %, quetiapine: 5.0 %, oxycodone: 12 %) than the proportion for the control medication (metformin: 0.3 %). Our automatic classification approach achieves 82 % accuracy overall (medication abuse class recall: 0.51, precision: 0.41, F measure: 0.46). To illustrate the utility of automatic classification, we show how the classification data can be used to analyze abuse patterns over time.
Conclusion
Our study indicates that social media can be a crucial resource for obtaining abuse-related information for medications, and that automatic approaches involving supervised classification and natural language processing hold promises for essential future monitoring and intervention tasks.
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Monitoring prescription medication abuse, which is a rapidly growing medication-related problem in the USA, is of paramount importance to public health. |
Social media postings can be used to detect patterns and intents of abuse and also to estimate the prevalence of abuse for a drug. |
Natural language processing and machine learning can be applied to automatically detect posts indicating prescription medication abuse, allowing interested agencies to perform real-time monitoring and analysis of medication abuse information. |
1 Introduction
Prescription medication abuse and overdose have become the fastest growing medication-related problems in the USA, reaching epidemic proportions [1–3]. According to the Drug Abuse Warning Network (DAWN) report [3] there were 5.1 million drug-related (prescription and illicit) emergency department visits in the year 2011, with approximately half of these attributed to misuse or abuse. The negative health consequences of prescription medication abuse are many, ranging from nausea to disorientation, paranoia, seizures, and even death [2]. A recently published Centers for Disease Control (CDC) report [4] shows that in the year 2013 there were 43,982 deaths due to drug overdose, of which 22,767 were attributable to prescription medications such as opioids and benzodiazepines (some were due to co-ingestion [5]). The number of deaths due to drug overdose has more than tripled in the USA since 1991 [6]. In the year 2007, opioid abuse alone amounted to an estimated total cost of US$55.7 billion [7] and later estimates suggest that medication misuse costs up to US$72.5 billion annually [8–10]. Despite such widespread abuse of prescription medication, there is no current well-established source of data to monitor abusers’ attitudes, methods, and patterns of abuse. Because of the severe nature of this problem, the Office of National Drug Control Policy released a drug abuse prevention plan [11], which puts monitoring as one of the primary areas of focus.
Current prescription medication abuse monitoring strategies are aimed primarily at distributors and licensed practitioners. The Drug Enforcement Agency (DEA) requires that wholesalers have monitoring programs in place to identify suspicious orders. For licensed, prescribing health practitioners, most states have monitoring programs that are supported by the National Association of State Controlled Substance Authorities and pharmacies are required to report the patients, prescribers, and specific medications dispensed for controlled substances. These data are used by prescribers and law enforcement agencies to identify and limit medication abuse. However, existing control measures lack critical information such as the patterns of usage of various medications and the demographic information of the users. For example, advertisements to deter prescription medication abuse might be more successful if broadcast during high abuse periods, if that information were available. Thus, there is a strong motivation to discover newer monitoring sources and methods.
We take the first steps towards operationalizing an automated, social media-based, medication abuse monitoring system. Social media has evolved into a crucial source of communication and it offers a range of possibilities for establishing multi-directional interaction, as well as acting as a resource for monitoring public sentiment and activity [12]. Twitter [13] is one of the most popular resources, with 289 million monthly active users, 58 million tweets per day, and 2.3 billion search queries per day [14]. Social media is currently being used as a resource for various tasks ranging from customized advertising [15] and sentiment analysis [16] to tasks specific to the public health domain (e.g., monitoring influenza epidemics [17], sexual health [18], pharmacovigilance [19], and drug abuse [3]). Our aims are to (1) verify that Twitter posts contain identifiable information about prescription medication abuse; (2) annotate abuse-indicating posts and create an annotation guideline for large-scale future research; and (3) verify the future applicability of automatic systems for social media-based medication abuse monitoring. We take a systematic approach towards our end goal following on from our past work on social media-based pharmacovigilance [20–22].
2 Methods
Figure 1 summarizes our methodological pipeline. The figure is divided into four parts, each indicating the subsection in which the associated study component is discussed. From a high level, the whole process may be grouped into four steps: (1) data collection; (2) annotation; (3) classification; and (4) analysis. We outline each sub-process in the rest of this section.
2.1 Data Collection and Spelling Variant Generation
We selected three abuse-prone medications (APMs) based on their reported abuse potential. Two, Adderall® (amphetamine-mixed-salts) and oxycodone, are well-known, while the third, quetiapine, is less widely known as an abused medication but is gaining popularity [23]. Table 1 presents key information about these three medications. We collected data associated with these medications by querying the Twitter Streaming API, which provides real-time access to a subset of all tweets being posted. For Adderall®, we used the trade name for querying. For quetiapine and oxycodone, we used the generic names and also their popular trade names OxyContin® and Seroquel®, respectively. Since Twitter users frequently misspell medication names, we applied a phonetic spelling generator to generate common misspellings [24]. We collected data from March 2014 to June 2015 and included a control medication for comparison, the oral diabetes drug metformin, as it does not have potential for abuse.
2.2 Annotation
We randomly selected 2600 user posts mentioning Adderall®,Footnote 1 1600 each for oxycodone and quetiapine, and 600 mentioning metformin for annotation. Two annotators performed binary classification of 6400 tweets to indicate abuse or non-abuse. Both intent to abuse and actual abuse were considered to be abuse for the purposes of annotation and only personal experiences, rather than generic statements, were considered. Because of the short nature of the posts on Twitter, it was often difficult to determine if a tweet indicated abuse or prescription use. Tweets were annotated as abuse-indicating if they did not mention clinical diagnoses but did describe potential use for non-medical benefits. Table 2 provides some examples of the annotated tweets.
We used Cohen’s kappa [25] to measure the inter-annotator agreement, and obtained substantial agreement (κ = 0.78). Figure 2 illustrates the final distributions for the proportions of abuse-indicating versus non-abuse tweets for each of the four medications. Adderall® has a much higher proportion of abuse-related Tweets than the other medications. In contrast, the control medication, metformin, had only two annotated abuse mentions. These were judged to be noise during our review of the annotations, enabling us to estimate the amount of noise in non-abuse data. Annotator disagreements were resolved by the study’s pharmacology expert (KS). Because of the relatively complex decision making required to decide if a tweet contains abuse information or not, and in the interest of comparative research, our evolving annotation guideline for this study is available to view [26].Footnote 2
Following the annotation, in order to ascertain if the proportions of abuse tweets for the APMs are different to the proportion among the metformin tweets, we performed Chi squared tests (H0: p1 = p2, i.e., the proportions of abuse tweets are equal for each APM and metformin). In all cases, the null hypothesis was rejected (p < 0.05), verifying that the APMs have significantly higher proportions of abuse-indicating tweets.
2.3 Supervised Classification
We model the task of detecting potentially abuse-indicating tweets as a supervised classification problem and use a number of features to address it. From the perspective of machine learning, classification is the problem of assigning a category, from a finite set of categories, to an observation. In our work, each tweet is an observation and there are two possible categories. Since we have a set of annotated tweets, we use them to train several machine learning algorithms. In this manner, we provide supervision to our algorithms. Given an unclassified observation, our approach generates a set of features from the observation and, using the model built on the training data, assigns a category to the new observation. We describe our feature sets in the following subsections.
2.3.1 Word n-Grams
A word n-gram is a sequence of contiguous n words in a text segment. Prior to generating the n-grams (1-, 2-, and 3-grams), we preprocessed the tweets to remove usernames (e.g., @xxxx) and hyperlinks, stemmed (i.e., converted words to their base forms: controlled, controlling → control) the tweets using the Porter stemmer [27] and lowercased them. We used a specialized tokenizer and part-of-speech tagger [28] to break down posts into words and identify their part-of-speech tags. We used the generated word tokens to build the n-grams. Because of the short nature of the tweets, the number of n-grams generated is relatively small. Hence, we attempted to generate a set of additional features from the texts, which encapsulate deeper semantic information.
2.3.2 Abuse-Indicating Terms
We collected terms from Hanson et al. [3, 29] that were used to search for indications of alternative motive, co-ingestion, frequent doses, and alternative routes of admission. As they may indicate medication abuse, we generated two features based on these terms—presence and counts of occurrences.
2.3.3 Drug–Slang Lexicon
We collected a set of colloquial phrases and terms that are used to discuss drug-related content on the internet [30]. We again used presence and counts as features, leaving out terms that are five characters or less in length (to ignore ambiguous terms: e.g., A, ace).
2.3.4 Synonym Expansion
Our analysis of the tweets during annotation suggested that users often express polarized sentiments when mentioning drug abuse. Therefore, we introduced a feature that has been used in the past for sentiment analysis and polarity classification [31]. This feature is generated by identifying all synonyms of all nouns, verbs and adjectives using WordNet [32]. Synonym expansion enables the generation of a large number of sentiment-indicating terms from a short post.
2.3.5 Word Clusters
Recent text classification tasks have benefited from the use of word clusters, which are broad semantic groupings of words learnt automatically from large amounts of unlabeled data, as features [33]. Therefore, we used the Twitter word clusters provided by Nikfarjam et al. [22]. The clusters were learnt from medication-related chatter collected for monitoring adverse drug reactions and each cluster attempts to encapsulate terms that are generally used in similar contexts. For each term, we used its cluster number as a nominal feature.
2.3.6 Classification
We used four off-the-shelf supervised classification algorithms to assess the performance of automatic detection, namely: Naïve Bayes, Support Vector Machines (SVMs), Maximum Entropy (ME), and a decision tree-based classifier (J48). We used the publicly available LibSVM [34] and Weka [35] tools for these classifiers. Following the initial classification, we focused on exploring optimization techniques to improve the classification performance particularly for the positive (abuse) class, which is especially difficult due to the class imbalance (i.e., the number of negative examples is much greater than the number of positive examples). To bias our classifiers towards choosing the positive class, we applied weights to give preference to this class [34]. Finally, all four classifiers were combined via stacking [36], a technique where the predictions from the different classifiers are combined and another algorithm is trained to make a final decision based on the individual predictions.
Using the best classification system, we performed two additional sets of experiments to (1) analyze the feature contributions; and (2) estimate how more data will affect performance. Results are presented in Sect. 3.
2.4 Analysis of Signals
To verify the utility of automatic classification and possible future applications, we performed an analysis of abuse patterns over time for Adderall® and oxycodone. We first classified all of our collected tweets using the stacking-based classifier and then visualized the distributions of tweets over time. Details of this analysis are presented in Sect. 4.
3 Results
We collected 119,809 tweets for Adderall®, 4082 for oxycodone, 4505 for quetiapine, and 1052 for metformin. Our final annotated dataset contained 5799 annotated tweets (excluding the 600 metformin tweets, and one Adderall® tweet due to character encoding issues): 869 indicating abuse and 4930 with no indication of abuse.Footnote 3
Table 3 presents the results of our automatic classification experiments using stratified tenfold cross-validations over the whole data and Fig. 3 presents the equations used to compute the scores.Footnote 4 The table shows that weighted SVMs have the highest F score for abuse among the individual classifiers, but marginally better results are observed when stacking is introduced.
In Table 4, we present the results of our two feature analysis experiments. The single-feature scores indicate how each feature performs individually, while the leave-out-feature scores indicate their contributions when combined with other features by illustrating changes in performance when they are removed from the combination. The most useful feature set is n-grams, as depicted by the two sets of results. Importantly, none of the single-feature scores are able to achieve the performance of all of the features combined. Synonym expansion and the drug–slang lexicon perform poorly when applied as single features. Despite the relative importance of word clusters in the single-feature classifications, the performance of the classifier when this feature is left out does not drop significantly.
Figure 4 illustrates how the classification performance varies with the training set size. The key information illustrated by the figure is that the abuse F score improves, as training data are added, in an approximately logarithmic fashion. Based on the logarithmic trend-line, one can predict that if 10,000+ annotated training instances are used, F scores of over 0.55 can be achieved for the abuse class without the use of any additional features. The non-abuse F scores and the accuracy scores are not significantly affected by the size of the training set, which is unsurprising considering the data imbalance issue.
4 Discussion
Our goals in this study were to verify that social media contains information indicating prescription medication abuse, prepare an annotation guideline for the annotation of Twitter data, and use a moderate sample of annotations to investigate if automatic classification approaches can be used to automatically detect information about prescription medication abuse from Twitter. Our experiments strongly suggest that social networks such as Twitter may provide valuable information about medication abuse. While the task of annotation of social network data is time-consuming and ambiguous, the availability of annotated data allows the training of systems that can identify abuse-related information from large volumes of social media data. Our trained system is capable of classifying abuse and non-abuse tweets with fair accuracy and its performance is likely to improve significantly with the availability of larger amounts of annotated data.
In this section we first outline some related work in order to put our contributions into context. We then verify the utility of automatic classification approaches for medication abuse monitoring. Finally, we present a brief error analysis to identify essential future improvements and discuss some of the limitations of this study.
4.1 Related Work
Toxicovigilance involves the active detection, validation, and follow-up of clinical adverse reactions related to toxic exposures, which may be caused by the non-medical use of prescription medications. Traditional tools for toxicovigilance include federally sponsored surveys and reports from the National Poisoning Data System (NPDS) [37], the US Food and Drug Administration (FDA) [38], and hospital networks such as DAWN. The NPDS provides data about calls that are placed to poison centers nationwide and, according to their website, the information may be used to track the risks of prescription medication abuse. The FDA MedWatch program [39] provides information about adverse drug events but does not monitor patterns of abuse actively (although there is much discussion around opioids and, in the last year, hydrocodone has moved to a schedule II drug). In contrast, DAWN primarily reports emergency department visit data. Although these systems all provide valuable data, there is a gap in determining prevalence (no denominator) and monitoring patterns of and attitudes towards abuse, which is one contribution social media can provide.
The first effort to propose the use of social media for monitoring the prevalence of drug abuse was the Psychonaut project [40] and recent studies have verified that it operates as a channel for exchanging prescription medication abuse information [41]. Chary et al. [6] discussed the benefits of using social media for toxicovigilance, relative to traditional tools, and suggested the use of text mining techniques, but did not report conducting any evaluations using these techniques. Recent efforts have attempted to develop web-based platforms and ontologies for social media mining for toxicovigilance [42]. Also, social media data have been used to perform targeted toxicovigilance tasks such as analyzing the effects of drug reformulation [43] or the phases of drug abuse recovery [44] from specialized forums.
Some recent studies have focused specifically on utilizing data from Twitter. Cavazos-Rehg et al. [45] demonstrated that social media can influence the behavior of young people, necessitating the need for surveillance efforts to monitor content on Twitter. Scott et al. [46] and Hanson et al. [29] presented similar conclusions and suggested that Twitter serves as a potential resource for not only surveillance but also for studying attitudes towards prescription drug abuse. Hanson et al. [3] studied the use of Adderall®, concluding that through the analysis of Twitter posts it can be verified that the medication is frequently abused as a study aid by college students. Similarly, Shutler et al. [47] qualitatively studied opioid abuse using a small set of annotated data. Very recently, Coloma et al. [48] studied the potential of social media in drug safety surveillance. The study concluded, following an elaborate manual analysis, that further research is required for establishing social media as a reliable resource. Importantly, this and other recent studies on this topic do not utilize the most attractive property of social media—massive volumes of data and automatic processing.
4.2 Utility of Automatic Monitoring
We classified all Adderall® tweets collected from March 2014 to March 2015 and all oxycodone tweets from June 2014 to June 2015.Footnote 5 Figure 5 presents the distribution of all tweets and abuse-indicating tweets for the two medications, and also the proportions of abuse-indicating tweets. Monthly usage patterns are different for the two medications, the only similarity being peaks around the holiday season (December). Furthermore, the distribution for Adderall® agrees with the manual analysis in Hanson et al. [3] and clearly illustrates the high number of tweets close to traditional exam times (i.e., November/December and April/May). Interestingly, Fig. 5b suggests that the general trend for proportions is increasing for Adderall® and decreasing for oxycodone, although further analysis is essential before drawing such conclusions. Analysis over longer periods of time may reveal other interesting insights.
These results verify that automatic social media-based monitoring of prescription medication abuse can play a role in identifying patterns of prescription medication usage. First, the numbers and proportions of abuse-indicating tweets over a period of time give us an indication of the extent of abuse for a specific medication. In addition, deeper analysis, manual or otherwise, of a set of classified tweets may reveal potentially decisive information. Other information, such as demographics of users, can also be extracted via automatic techniques for deeper analysis.
4.3 Error Analysis
In Table 5, we show that there are a large number of false positives for Adderall®, but the reverse is true for the other medications. Our analysis identified some key reasons behind these numbers. For Adderall®, a large number of tweets are impersonal, without any direct association to the user. Although these were annotated as non-abuse, due to the n-gram patterns and the presence of keywords, the classifiers are often unable to accurately identify them. Tweets mentioning other medications face the same issue, but to a lesser extent. For quetiapine and oxycodone, the high numbers of false negatives are caused by the lack of sufficient abuse-indicating tweets in our training sample. This problem can easily be addressed by incorporating more data. In many cases, the tweets contained too many non-standard spellings, which resulted in misclassifications (generally, these contributed to false negatives). Non-standard spellings also impact the generation of deep linguistic features (e.g., synonyms). We identified these three reasons (impersonal tweets, small training set, and non-standard spellings) to be the primary causes of misclassifications. In addition, we also observed during the analysis that a significant number of correctly classified tweets contained evidence of co-ingestion (e.g., with marijuana, coffee, and/or prescription medications). With Twitter data indicating that there are significant levels of co-ingestion-related abuse of these medications, the effects of such intake should perhaps be studied in greater detail. Table 6 presents some sample misclassified tweets and some correctly classified tweets indicating co-ingestion.
4.4 Limitations
As already mentioned, the biggest limitation of our study, from the perspective of supervised learning, is the lack of sufficient training data. This is particularly true for the abuse class, which has less than 1000 instances. Ambiguity in tweets and the lack of context hinders both annotation and automatic classification. A number of tweets were regarded to be ambiguous during annotations and these were resolved by our pharmacology expert. These ambiguities leave a gray zone in the binary classification process and this limitation will persist until future annotation guidelines are able to specify more fine-tuned annotation rules.
Because we use social media to collect abuse-related information, our study is limited to the population group that is adept at using social media. All public health monitoring studies that rely on social media data are faced with this limitation. However, as the rapid growth of social media continues and as current users grow older, the impact of this limitation will inevitably decrease.
5 Conclusion and Future Directions
We investigated the potential of social media as a resource for monitoring medication abuse patterns. We first verified that social media contains identifiable abuse-indicating information for three commonly abused medications and that these are significantly more prominent than potential noise associated with non-abuse medications. We prepared annotation guidelines and annotated a moderate-sized dataset. Using supervised classification, we obtained classification accuracies of 82 % (positive class F score: 0.46). We identified three key factors that are likely to improve classification performance: identification of personal versus impersonal tweets, normalization of tweets (e.g., spelling correction), and the utilization of more training data. To show the utility of automatic approaches for toxicovigilance, we performed an analysis of usage patterns and showed that our conclusions agree with past manual analyses.
Based on the promising results obtained, we will focus strongly on the following three research problems in the future:
-
1.
Annotation. We will significantly increase the size of our annotated dataset and perform iterative annotations to reduce ambiguities.
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2.
Visualization and real-time monitoring. Figure 5 is an example of how medication abuse information can be visualized. We intend to implement web-based visualization tools for real-time monitoring of the social media sphere.
-
3.
Natural language processing-oriented improvements. To improve the reliability of our methods, we will explore natural language processing techniques to automatically identify non-personal tweets. We will also attempt to perform lexical normalization as a preprocessing step to correct spelling errors. While some work has been done on social media text normalization [49], there are no available techniques that are customized to specific types of social media text (e.g., health-related social media text).
We believe that our automatic approaches will have significant importance for various toxicovigilance tasks, including, but not limited to, determining the prevalence of abuse, studying medication abuse patterns, and identifying the impacts of control measures.
Notes
A larger number of Adderall® tweets were chosen for annotation because of the significantly larger number of tweets available for it.
The guideline also contains a set of ambiguous tweets identified by our pharmacology expert, which require contextual analysis in the future.
A sample of the finalized annotations will be made available to the research community at http://diego.asu.edu/Publications/DrugAbuse_DrugSafety.html.
Note that the overall accuracy is primarily driven by the classification performance on the larger class (i.e., non-abuse class) because of the significantly larger number of instances.
Slightly different periods are used for the two medications as the collection of oxycodone tweets commenced a little later than the other medications.
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This work was supported by National Institutes of Health (NIH) National Library of Medicine (NLM) grant number NIH NLM 5R01LM011176. The content is solely the responsibility of the authors and does not necessarily represent the official views of the NLM or NIH.
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Abeed Sarker, Rachel Ginn, Karen O’Connor, Matthew Scotch, Karen Smith, Dan Malone, and Graciela Gonzalez have no conflicts of interest that are directly relevant to the content of this study.
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Sarker, A., O’Connor, K., Ginn, R. et al. Social Media Mining for Toxicovigilance: Automatic Monitoring of Prescription Medication Abuse from Twitter. Drug Saf 39, 231–240 (2016). https://doi.org/10.1007/s40264-015-0379-4
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DOI: https://doi.org/10.1007/s40264-015-0379-4