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Development and Optimization of a Machine-Learning Prediction Model for Acute Desquamation After Breast Radiation Therapy in the Multicenter REQUITE Cohort

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posted on 2022-03-21, 16:51 authored by M Aldraimli, S Osman, D Grishchuck, S Ingram, R Lyon, A Mistry, J Oliveira, R Samuel, LEA Shelley, D Soria, MV Dwek, ME Aguado-Barrera, D Azria, J Chang-Claude, A Dunning, A Giraldo, S Green, S Gutiérrez-Enríquez, C Herskind, H van Hulle, M Lambrecht, L Lozza, T Rancati, V Reyes, BS Rosenstein, D de Ruysscher, MC de Santis, P Seibold, E Sperk, RP Symonds, H Stobart, B Taboada-Valadares, CJ Talbot, VJL Vakaet, A Vega, L Veldeman, MR Veldwijk, A Webb, C Weltens, CM West, TJ Chaussalet, T Rattay
Purpose
Some patients with breast cancer treated by surgery and radiation therapy experience clinically significant toxicity, which may adversely affect cosmesis and quality of life. There is a paucity of validated clinical prediction models for radiation toxicity. We used machine learning (ML) algorithms to develop and optimise a clinical prediction model for acute breast desquamation after whole breast external beam radiation therapy in the prospective multicenter REQUITE cohort study.

Methods and Materials
Using demographic and treatment-related features (m = 122) from patients (n = 2058) at 26 centers, we trained 8 ML algorithms with 10-fold cross-validation in a 50:50 random-split data set with class stratification to predict acute breast desquamation. Based on performance in the validation data set, the logistic model tree, random forest, and naïve Bayes models were taken forward to cost-sensitive learning optimisation.

Results
One hundred and ninety-two patients experienced acute desquamation. Resampling and cost-sensitive learning optimisation facilitated an improvement in classification performance. Based on maximising sensitivity (true positives), the “hero” model was the cost-sensitive random forest algorithm with a false-negative: false-positive misclassification penalty of 90:1 containing m = 114 predictive features. Model sensitivity and specificity were 0.77 and 0.66, respectively, with an area under the curve of 0.77 in the validation cohort.

Conclusions
ML algorithms with resampling and cost-sensitive learning generated clinically valid prediction models for acute desquamation using patient demographic and treatment features. Further external validation and inclusion of genomic markers in ML prediction models are worthwhile, to identify patients at increased risk of toxicity who may benefit from supportive intervention or even a change in treatment plan.

History

Citation

Advances in Radiation Oncology Volume 7, Issue 3, May–June 2022, 100890

Author affiliation

Leicester Cancer Research Centre, University of Leicester

Version

  • VoR (Version of Record)

Published in

Advances in Radiation Oncology

Volume

7

Issue

3

Pagination

100890

Publisher

Elsevier BV

issn

2452-1094

eissn

2452-1094

Acceptance date

2021-12-06

Copyright date

2022

Available date

2022-03-21

Language

eng

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