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MODILM: towards better complex diseases classification using a novel multi-omics data integration learning model.

Authors :
Zhong, Yating
Peng, Yuzhong
Lin, Yanmei
Chen, Dingjia
Zhang, Hao
Zheng, Wen
Chen, Yuanyuan
Wu, Changliang
Source :
BMC Medical Informatics & Decision Making; 5/5/2023, Vol. 23 Issue 1, p1-18, 18p
Publication Year :
2023

Abstract

Background: Accurately classifying complex diseases is crucial for diagnosis and personalized treatment. Integrating multi-omics data has been demonstrated to enhance the accuracy of analyzing and classifying complex diseases. This can be attributed to the highly correlated nature of the data with various diseases, as well as the comprehensive and complementary information it provides. However, integrating multi-omics data for complex diseases is challenged by data characteristics such as high imbalance, scale variation, heterogeneity, and noise interference. These challenges further emphasize the importance of developing effective methods for multi-omics data integration. Results: We proposed a novel multi-omics data learning model called MODILM, which integrates multiple omics data to improve the classification accuracy of complex diseases by obtaining more significant and complementary information from different single-omics data. Our approach includes four key steps: 1) constructing a similarity network for each omics data using the cosine similarity measure, 2) leveraging Graph Attention Networks to learn sample-specific and intra-association features from similarity networks for single-omics data, 3) using Multilayer Perceptron networks to map learned features to a new feature space, thereby strengthening and extracting high-level omics-specific features, and 4) fusing these high-level features using a View Correlation Discovery Network to learn cross-omics features in the label space, which results in unique class-level distinctiveness for complex diseases. To demonstrate the effectiveness of MODILM, we conducted experiments on six benchmark datasets consisting of miRNA expression, mRNA, and DNA methylation data. Our results show that MODILM outperforms state-of-the-art methods, effectively improving the accuracy of complex disease classification. Conclusions: Our MODILM provides a more competitive way to extract and integrate important and complementary information from multiple omics data, providing a very promising tool for supporting decision-making for clinical diagnosis. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
14726947
Volume :
23
Issue :
1
Database :
Complementary Index
Journal :
BMC Medical Informatics & Decision Making
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
163554064
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1186/s12911-023-02173-9