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Abstract
Osteoarthritis (OA) is a chronic condition often associated with pain, affecting approximately fourteen percent of the population, and increasing in prevalence. A globally aging population have made treating OA-associated pain as well as maintaining mobility and activity a public health priority. OA affects all mammals, and the use of spontaneous animal models is one promising approach for improving translational pain research and the development of effective treatment strategies. Accelerometers are a common tool for collecting high-frequency activity data on animals to study the effects of treatment on pain related activity patterns. There has recently been increasing interest in their use to understand treatment effects in human pain conditions. However, activity patterns vary widely across subjects; furthermore, the effects of treatment may manifest in higher or lower activity counts or in subtler ways like changes in the frequency of certain types of activities. We use a zero inflated Poisson hidden semi-Markov model to characterize activity patterns and subsequently derive estimators of the treatment effect in terms of changes in activity levels or frequency of activity type. We demonstrate the application of our model, and its advance over traditional analysis methods, using data from a naturally occurring feline OA-associated pain model.
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Details
1 North Carolina State University, Department of Statistics, Raleigh, USA (GRID:grid.40803.3f) (ISNI:0000 0001 2173 6074)
2 North Carolina State University, Comparative Pain Research and Education Center, College of Veterinary Medicine, Raleigh, USA (GRID:grid.40803.3f) (ISNI:0000 0001 2173 6074); North Carolina State University, College of Veterinary Medicine, Translational Research in Pain (TRiP) Program, Raleigh, USA (GRID:grid.40803.3f) (ISNI:0000 0001 2173 6074); UNC School of Medicine, Thurston Arthritis Center, Chapel Hill, USA (GRID:grid.10698.36) (ISNI:0000000122483208); Duke University, Center for Translational Pain Research, Department of Anesthesiology, Durham, USA (GRID:grid.26009.3d) (ISNI:0000 0004 1936 7961)