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A Weakly Supervised Deep Learning Method for Guiding Ovarian Cancer Treatment and Identifying an Effective Biomarker.

Authors :
Wang, Ching-Wei
Lee, Yu-Ching
Chang, Cheng-Chang
Lin, Yi-Jia
Liou, Yi-An
Hsu, Po-Chao
Chang, Chun-Chieh
Sai, Aung-Kyaw-Oo
Wang, Chih-Hung
Chao, Tai-Kuang
Source :
Cancers. Apr2022, Vol. 14 Issue 7, p1651. 19p.
Publication Year :
2022

Abstract

Simple Summary: Molecular target therapy, i.e., antiangiogenesis with bevacizumab, was found to be effective in some patients of epithelial ovarian cancer. Considering the cost, potential adverse effects, including hypertension, proteinuria, bleeding, thromboembolic events, poor wound healing and gastrointestinal perforation, and no confirmed and accessible biomarkers for routine clinical use to direct patient selection for bevacizumab treatment, the identification of new predictive methods remains an urgent unmet medical need. This study identifies an effective biomarker and presents an automatic weakly supervised deep learning framework for patient selection and guiding ovarian cancer treatment. Ovarian cancer is a common malignant gynecological disease. Molecular target therapy, i.e., antiangiogenesis with bevacizumab, was found to be effective in some patients of epithelial ovarian cancer (EOC). Although careful patient selection is essential, there are currently no biomarkers available for routine therapeutic usage. To the authors' best knowledge, this is the first automated precision oncology framework to effectively identify and select EOC and peritoneal serous papillary carcinoma (PSPC) patients with positive therapeutic effect. From March 2013 to January 2021, we have a database, containing four kinds of immunohistochemical tissue samples, including AIM2, c3, C5 and NLRP3, from patients diagnosed with EOC and PSPC and treated with bevacizumab in a hospital-based retrospective study. We developed a hybrid deep learning framework and weakly supervised deep learning models for each potential biomarker, and the experimental results show that the proposed model in combination with AIM2 achieves high accuracy 0.92, recall 0.97, F-measure 0.93 and AUC 0.97 for the first experiment (66% training and 34%testing) and high accuracy 0.86 ± 0.07, precision 0.9 ± 0.07, recall 0.85 ± 0.06, F-measure 0.87 ± 0.06 and AUC 0.91 ± 0.05 for the second experiment using five-fold cross validation, respectively. Both Kaplan-Meier PFS analysis and Cox proportional hazards model analysis further confirmed that the proposed AIM2-DL model is able to distinguish patients gaining positive therapeutic effects with low cancer recurrence from patients with disease progression after treatment (p < 0.005). [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
20726694
Volume :
14
Issue :
7
Database :
Academic Search Index
Journal :
Cancers
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
156276447
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.3390/cancers14071651