Predicting intervention approval in clinical trials through multi-document summarization

G Katsimpras, G Paliouras - arXiv preprint arXiv:2204.00290, 2022 - arxiv.org
arXiv preprint arXiv:2204.00290, 2022arxiv.org
Clinical trials offer a fundamental opportunity to discover new treatments and advance the
medical knowledge. However, the uncertainty of the outcome of a trial can lead to
unforeseen costs and setbacks. In this study, we propose a new method to predict the
effectiveness of an intervention in a clinical trial. Our method relies on generating an
informative summary from multiple documents available in the literature about the
intervention under study. Specifically, our method first gathers all the abstracts of PubMed …
Clinical trials offer a fundamental opportunity to discover new treatments and advance the medical knowledge. However, the uncertainty of the outcome of a trial can lead to unforeseen costs and setbacks. In this study, we propose a new method to predict the effectiveness of an intervention in a clinical trial. Our method relies on generating an informative summary from multiple documents available in the literature about the intervention under study. Specifically, our method first gathers all the abstracts of PubMed articles related to the intervention. Then, an evidence sentence, which conveys information about the effectiveness of the intervention, is extracted automatically from each abstract. Based on the set of evidence sentences extracted from the abstracts, a short summary about the intervention is constructed. Finally, the produced summaries are used to train a BERT-based classifier, in order to infer the effectiveness of an intervention. To evaluate our proposed method, we introduce a new dataset which is a collection of clinical trials together with their associated PubMed articles. Our experiments, demonstrate the effectiveness of producing short informative summaries and using them to predict the effectiveness of an intervention.
arxiv.org
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