4.7 Article

A meta-learning approach to improving radiation response prediction in cancers

期刊

COMPUTERS IN BIOLOGY AND MEDICINE
卷 150, 期 -, 页码 -

出版社

PERGAMON-ELSEVIER SCIENCE LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.compbiomed.2022.106163

关键词

Meta-learning; Radiation response; Radiosensitivity; Pan-cancer; Gene expression; DNA methylation

资金

  1. National Key R&D Program of China [2018YFC0910500]
  2. SJTU-Yale Collaborative Research Seed Fund
  3. Neil Shen's SJTU Medical Research Fund
  4. HuBei Provincial Department of Science and Technology Innovation Group Programme [2019CFA034]
  5. Chinese Medical Association Radiation Oncology Branch [Z2017-24-2108]
  6. Foundation for Free Exploration of Hubei University of Medicine [FDFR201802]
  7. Advantages Discipline Group (Medicine) Project in Higher Education of Hubei Province (2021-2025) [2022XKQT2]

向作者/读者索取更多资源

Using the meta-learning framework, we developed an approach to improve individual radiation response prediction. By transferring common knowledge from pan-cancer data to specific cancers, our models demonstrated good performance and biological significance across nine cancer types.
Purpose: Predicting the efficacy of radiotherapy in individual patients has drawn widespread attention, but the limited sample size remains a bottleneck for utilizing high-dimensional multi-omics data to guide personalized radiotherapy. We hypothesize the recently developed meta-learning framework could address this limitation. Methods and materials: By combining gene expression, DNA methylation, and clinical data of 806 patients who had received radiotherapy from The Cancer Genome Atlas (TCGA), we applied the Model-Agnostic Meta-Learning (MAML) framework to tasks consisting of pan-cancer data, to obtain the best initial parameters of a neural network for a specific cancer with smaller number of samples. The performance of meta-learning framework was compared with four traditional machine learning methods based on two training schemes, and tested on Cancer Cell Line Encyclopedia (CCLE) and Chinese Glioma Genome Atlas (CGGA) datasets. Moreover, biological significance of the models was investigated by survival analysis and feature interpretation. Results: The mean AUC (Area under the ROC Curve) [95% confidence interval] of our models across nine cancer types was 0.702 [0.691-0.713], which improved by 0.166 on average over other the four machine learning methods on two training schemes. Our models performed significantly better (p < 0.05) in seven cancer types and performed comparable to the other predictors in the rest of two cancer types. The more pan-cancer samples were used to transfer meta-knowledge, the greater the performance improved (p < 0.05). The predicted response scores that our models generated were negatively correlated with cell radiosensitivity index in four cancer types < 0.05), while not statistically significant in the other three cancer types. Moreover, the predicted response scores were shown to be prognostic factors in seven cancer types and eight potential radiosensitivity-related genes were identified. Conclusions: For the first time, we established the meta-learning approach to improving individual radiation response prediction by transferring common knowledge from pan-cancer data with MAML framework. The results demonstrated the superiority, generalizability, and biological significance of our approach.

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