IntroductionBig data sources represent an opportunity for diabetes research. One example is the French national health data system (SNDS), gathering information on medical claims of out-of-hospital health care and hospitalizations for the entire French population (66 million). Currently, a validated algorithm based on antidiabetic drug reimbursement is able to identify people with pharmacologically-treated diabetes in the SNDS. But it cannot distinguish type 1 from type 2 diabetes. Differentiating type 1 and type 2 diabetes is crucial in diabetes surveillance, because they carry differences in their prevention, populations at risk, disease natural history, pathophysiology, management and risk of complications.This article investigates the development of a type 1/type 2 diabetes classification algorithm using artificial intelligence and its application to estimate the prevalence of type 1 and type 2 diabetes in France. MethodsThe final data set comprised all diabetes cases from the CONSTANCES cohort (n = 951). A supervised machine learning method based on eight steps was used: final data set selection, target definition (type 1), coding features, final data set splitting into training and testing data sets, feature selection and training and validation and selection of algorithms. The selected algorithm was applied to SNDS data to estimate the type 1 and type 2 diabetes prevalence among adults 18–70 years of age. ResultsAmong the 3481 SNDS features, 14 were selected to train the different algorithms. The final algorithm was a linear discriminant analysis model based on the number of reimbursements for fast-acting insulin, long-acting insulin and biguanides over the previous year (specificity 97% and sensitivity 100%). In 2016, after adjusting for algorithm performance, type 1 and type 2 diabetes prevalence in France was estimated to be 0.3% and 4.4%, respectively. ConclusionOur type 1/type 2 classification algorithm was found to perform well and to be applicable to any prescription or medical claims database from other countries. Artificial intelligence opens new possibilities for research and diabetes prevention.
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