An Automatically Adaptive Digital Health Intervention to Decrease Opioid-Related Risk While Conserving Counselor Time: Quantitative Analysis of Treatment Decisions Based on Artificial Intelligence and Patient-Reported Risk Measures.

John D Piette, Laura Thomas, Sean Newman, Nicolle Marinec, Joel Krauss, Jenny Chen, Zhenke Wu, Amy S B Bohnert
Author Information
  1. John D Piette: Ann Arbor Department of Veterans Affairs Center for Clinical Management Research, Ann Arbor, MI, United States. ORCID
  2. Laura Thomas: Ann Arbor Department of Veterans Affairs Center for Clinical Management Research, Ann Arbor, MI, United States. ORCID
  3. Sean Newman: Ann Arbor Department of Veterans Affairs Center for Clinical Management Research, Ann Arbor, MI, United States. ORCID
  4. Nicolle Marinec: Ann Arbor Department of Veterans Affairs Center for Clinical Management Research, Ann Arbor, MI, United States. ORCID
  5. Joel Krauss: Department of Emergency Medicine, Trinity Health St. Joseph Mercy, Ann Arbor, MI, United States. ORCID
  6. Jenny Chen: Ann Arbor Department of Veterans Affairs Center for Clinical Management Research, Ann Arbor, MI, United States. ORCID
  7. Zhenke Wu: Department of Biostatistics, School of Public Health, University of Michigan, Ann Arbor, MI, United States. ORCID
  8. Amy S B Bohnert: Ann Arbor Department of Veterans Affairs Center for Clinical Management Research, Ann Arbor, MI, United States. ORCID

Abstract

BACKGROUND: Some patients prescribed opioid analgesic (OA) medications for pain experience serious side effects, including dependence, sedation, and overdose. As most patients are at low risk for OA-related harms, risk reduction interventions requiring multiple counseling sessions are impractical on a large scale.
OBJECTIVE: This study evaluates whether an intervention based on reinforcement learning (RL), a field of artificial intelligence, learned through experience to personalize interactions with patients with pain discharged from the emergency department (ED) and decreased self-reported OA misuse behaviors while conserving counselors' time.
METHODS: We used data representing 2439 weekly interactions between a digital health intervention ("Prescription Opioid Wellness and Engagement Research in the ED" [PowerED]) and 228 patients with pain discharged from 2 EDs who reported recent opioid misuse. During each patient's 12 weeks of intervention, PowerED used RL to select from 3 treatment options: a brief motivational message delivered via an interactive voice response (IVR) call, a longer motivational IVR call, or a live call from a counselor. The algorithm selected session types for each patient each week, with the goal of minimizing OA risk, defined in terms of a dynamic score reflecting patient reports during IVR monitoring calls. When a live counseling call was predicted to have a similar impact on future risk as an IVR message, the algorithm favored IVR to conserve counselor time. We used logit models to estimate changes in the relative frequency of each session type as PowerED gained experience. Poisson regression was used to examine the changes in self-reported OA risk scores over calendar time, controlling for the ordinal session number (1st to 12th).
RESULTS: Participants on average were 40 (SD 12.7) years of age; 66.7% (152/228) were women and 51.3% (117/228) were unemployed. Most participants (175/228, 76.8%) reported chronic pain, and 46.2% (104/225) had moderate to severe depressive symptoms. As PowerED gained experience through interactions over a period of 142 weeks, it delivered fewer live counseling sessions than brief IVR sessions (P=.006) and extended IVR sessions (P<.001). Live counseling sessions were selected 33.5% of the time in the first 5 weeks of interactions (95% CI 27.4%-39.7%) but only for 16.4% of sessions (95% CI 12.7%-20%) after 125 weeks. Controlling for each patient's changes during the course of treatment, this adaptation of treatment-type allocation led to progressively greater improvements in self-reported OA risk scores (P<.001) over calendar time, as measured by the number of weeks since enrollment began. Improvement in risk behaviors over time was especially pronounced among patients with the highest risk at baseline (P=.02).
CONCLUSIONS: The RL-supported program learned which treatment modalities worked best to improve self-reported OA risk behaviors while conserving counselors' time. RL-supported interventions represent a scalable solution for patients with pain receiving OA prescriptions.
TRIAL REGISTRATION: Clinicaltrials.gov NCT02990377; https://classic.clinicaltrials.gov/ct2/show/NCT02990377.

Keywords

Associated Data

ClinicalTrials.gov | NCT02990377

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Grants

  1. P30 DK092926/NIDDK NIH HHS
  2. R01 DA039159/NIDA NIH HHS

MeSH Term

Female
Humans
Male
Analgesics, Opioid
Artificial Intelligence
Chronic Pain
Counselors
Opioid-Related Disorders
Patient Reported Outcome Measures
Adult
Middle Aged

Chemicals

Analgesics, Opioid

Word Cloud

Created with Highcharts 10.0.0riskOAtimeIVRpatientspainsessionsweeksexperiencecounselinginteractionsself-reportedusedcallopioidinterventionbehaviors12PowerEDtreatmentlivesessionchangesinterventionsreinforcementlearningRLartificialintelligencelearneddischargedmisuseconservingcounselors'reportedpatient'sbriefmotivationalmessagedeliveredcounseloralgorithmselectedpatientgainedscorescalendarnumber7%P=P<00195%CIRL-supportedRiskBACKGROUND:prescribedanalgesicmedicationsserioussideeffectsincludingdependencesedationoverdoselowOA-relatedharmsreductionrequiringmultipleimpracticallargescaleOBJECTIVE:studyevaluateswhetherbasedfieldpersonalizeemergencydepartmentEDdecreasedMETHODS:datarepresenting2439weeklydigitalhealth"PrescriptionOpioidWellnessEngagementResearchED"[PowerED]2282EDsrecentselect3options:viainteractivevoiceresponselongertypesweekgoalminimizingdefinedtermsdynamicscorereflectingreportsmonitoringcallspredictedsimilarimpactfuturefavoredconservelogitmodelsestimaterelativefrequencytypePoissonregressionexaminecontrollingordinal1st12thRESULTS:Participantsaverage40SD7yearsage66152/228women513%117/228unemployedparticipants175/228768%chronic462%104/225moderateseveredepressivesymptomsperiod142fewer006extendedLive335%first5274%-39164%7%-20%125Controllingcourseadaptationtreatment-typeallocationledprogressivelygreaterimprovementsmeasuredsinceenrollmentbeganImprovementespeciallypronouncedamonghighestbaseline02CONCLUSIONS:programmodalitiesworkedbestimproverepresentscalablesolutionreceivingprescriptionsTRIALREGISTRATION:ClinicaltrialsgovNCT02990377https://classicclinicaltrialsgov/ct2/show/NCT02990377AutomaticallyAdaptiveDigitalHealthInterventionDecreaseOpioid-RelatedConservingCounselorTime:QuantitativeAnalysisTreatmentDecisionsBasedArtificialIntelligencePatient-ReportedMeasuressafetymanagementtelehealth

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