Journal
OPHTHALMOLOGY
Volume 115, Issue 9, Pages 1598-1607Publisher
ELSEVIER SCIENCE INC
DOI: 10.1016/j.ophtha.2008.01.032
Keywords
-
Categories
Funding
- BIOPAT-rERN EU Network of Excellence [EU 508803]
- National Commissioning Group, Department of Health of England, London, United Kingdom
Ask authors/readers for more resources
Purpose: To describe neural networks predicting survival from choroidal melanoma (i.e., any uveal melanoma involving choroid) and to demonstrate the value of entering age, sex, clinical stage, cytogenetic type, and histologic grade into the predictive model. Design: Nonrandomized case series. Participants: Patients resident in mainland Britain treated by the first author for choroidal melanoma between 1984 and 2006. Methods: A conditional hazard estimating neural network (CHENN) was trained according to the Bayesian formalism with a training set of 1780 patients and evaluated with a test set of another 874 patients. Conditional hazard estimating neural network-generated survival curves were compared with those obtained with Kaplan-Meier analyses. A second model was created with information on chromosome 3 loss, using training and test sets of 211 and 140 patients, respectively. Main Outcome Measures: Comparison of CHENN survival curves with Kaplan-Meier analyses. Representative results showing all-cause survival and inferred melanoma-specific mortality, according to age, sex, clinical stage, cytogenetic type, and histologic grade. Results: The predictive model plotted a survival curve with 95% credibility intervals for patients with melanoma according to relevant risk factors: age, sex, largest basal tumor diameter, ciliary body involvement, extraocular extension, tumor cell type, closed loops, mitotic rate, and chromosome 3 loss (i.e., monosomy 3). A survival curve for the age-matched general population of the same sex allowed estimation of the melanoma-related mortality. All-cause survival curves generated by the CHENN matched those produced with Kaplan-Meier analysis (Kolmogorov-Smirnov, P<0.05). In older patients, however, the estimated melanoma-related mortality was lower with the CHENN, which accounted for competing risks, unlike Kaplan-Meier analysis. Largest basal tumor diameter was most predictive of mortality in tumors showing histologic and cytogenetic features of high-grade malignancy. Ciliary body involvement and extraocular extension lost significance when cytogenetic and histologic data were included in the model. Patients with a monosomy 3 melanoma of a particular size were predicted to have shorter survival if their tumor showed epithelioid cells and closed loops. Conclusions: Estimation of survival prognosis in patients with choroidal melanoma requires multivariate assessment of age, sex, clinical tumor stage, cytogenetic melanoma type, and histologic grade of malignancy. Financial Disciosure(s): The authors have no proprietary or commercial interest in any materials discussed in this article.
Authors
I am an author on this paper
Click your name to claim this paper and add it to your profile.
Reviews
Recommended
No Data Available