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Multi-Organ Omics-Based Prediction for Adaptive Radiation Therapy Eligibility in Nasopharyngeal Carcinoma Patients Undergoing Concurrent Chemoradiotherapy.

Authors :
Lam, Sai-Kit
Zhang, Yuanpeng
Zhang, Jiang
Li, Bing
Sun, Jia-Chen
Liu, Carol Yee-Tung
Chou, Pak-Hei
Teng, Xinzhi
Ma, Zong-Rui
Ni, Rui-Yan
Zhou, Ta
Peng, Tao
Xiao, Hao-Nan
Li, Tian
Ren, Ge
Cheung, Andy Lai-Yin
Lee, Francis Kar-Ho
Yip, Celia Wai-Yi
Au, Kwok-Hung
Lee, Victor Ho-Fun
Source :
Frontiers in Oncology; 1/31/2022, Vol. 12, p1-12, 12p
Publication Year :
2022

Abstract

Purpose: To investigate the role of different multi-organ omics-based prediction models for pre-treatment prediction of Adaptive Radiotherapy (ART) eligibility in patients with nasopharyngeal carcinoma (NPC). Methods and Materials: Pre-treatment contrast-enhanced computed tomographic and magnetic resonance images, radiotherapy dose and contour data of 135 NPC patients treated at Hong Kong Queen Elizabeth Hospital were retrospectively analyzed for extraction of multi-omics features, namely Radiomics (R), Morphology (M), Dosiomics (D), and Contouromics (C), from a total of eight organ structures. During model development, patient cohort was divided into a training set and a hold-out test set in a ratio of 7 to 3 via 20 iterations. Four single-omics models (R, M, D, C) and four multi-omics models (RD, RC, RM, RMDC) were developed on the training data using Ridge and Multi-Kernel Learning (MKL) algorithm, respectively, under 10-fold cross validation, and evaluated on hold-out test data using average area under the receiver-operator-characteristics curve (AUC). The best-performing single-omics model was first determined by comparing the AUC distribution across the 20 iterations among the four single-omics models using two-sided student t -test, which was then retrained using MKL algorithm for a fair comparison with the four multi-omics models. Results: The R model significantly outperformed all other three single-omics models (all p-value<0.0001), achieving an average AUC of 0.942 (95%CI: 0.938-0.946) and 0.918 (95%CI: 0.903-0.933) in training and hold-out test set, respectively. When trained with MKL, the R model (R_MKL) yielded an increased AUC of 0.984 (95%CI: 0.981-0.988) and 0.927 (95%CI: 0.905-0.948) in training and hold-out test set respectively, while demonstrating no significant difference as compared to all studied multi-omics models in the hold-out test sets. Intriguingly, Radiomic features accounted for the majority of the final selected features, ranging from 64% to 94%, in all the studied multi-omics models. Conclusions: Among all the studied models, the Radiomic model was found to play a dominant role for ART eligibility in NPC patients, and Radiomic features accounted for the largest proportion of features in all the multi-omics models. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
2234943X
Volume :
12
Database :
Complementary Index
Journal :
Frontiers in Oncology
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
154998448
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.3389/fonc.2021.792024