4.7 Article

Screening for Predictors of Chronic Ciguatera Poisoning: An Exploratory Analysis among Hospitalized Cases from French Polynesia

Journal

TOXINS
Volume 13, Issue 9, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/toxins13090646

Keywords

ciguatera poisoning; epidemiology; least absolute shrinkage and selection operator; machine learning; data science; medical informatics; survival analysis; foodborne diseases

Funding

  1. United States National Institute for Environmental Health Sciences (NIEHS)
  2. National Institute on Aging (NIA)
  3. NIA [U54AG062334]
  4. NIEHS [P30ES019776]

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This study analyzed medical files of 49 patients to better understand chronic ciguatera manifestations and identify potential predictive factors for their duration. The study found age, tobacco consumption, acute bradycardia, laboratory measures of urea, and neutrophils to be significant predictors of symptoms lasting >= 3 months. This exploratory study contributes to the development of ciguatera epidemiology by narrowing down the predictors worth further investigation.
Ciguatera poisoning is a globally occurring seafood disease caused by the ingestion of marine products contaminated with dinoflagellate produced neurotoxins. Persistent forms of ciguatera, which prove to be highly debilitating, are poorly studied and represent a significant medical issue. The present study aims to better understand chronic ciguatera manifestations and identify potential predictive factors for their duration. Medical files of 49 patients were analyzed, and the post-hospitalization evolution of the disease assessed through a follow-up questionnaire. A rigorous logistic lasso regression model was applied to select significant predictors from a list of 37 patient characteristics potentially predictive of having chronic symptoms. Missing data were handled by complete case analysis, and a survival analysis was implemented. All models used standardized variables, and multiple comparisons in the survival analyses were handled by Bonferroni correction. Among all studied variables, five significant predictors of having symptoms lasting >= 3 months were identified: age, tobacco consumption, acute bradycardia, laboratory measures of urea, and neutrophils. This exploratory, hypothesis-generating study contributes to the development of ciguatera epidemiology by narrowing the list from 37 possible predictors to a list of five predictors that seem worth further investigation as candidate risk factors in more targeted studies of ciguatera symptom duration.

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