PLUS: Predicting cancer metastasis potential based on positive and unlabeled learning.
Junyi ZhouXiaoyu LuWennan ChangChanglin WanXiongbin LuChi ZhangSha CaoPublished in: PLoS computational biology (2022)
Metastatic cancer accounts for over 90% of all cancer deaths, and evaluations of metastasis potential are vital for minimizing the metastasis-associated mortality and achieving optimal clinical decision-making. Computational assessment of metastasis potential based on large-scale transcriptomic cancer data is challenging because metastasis events are not always clinically detectable. The under-diagnosis of metastasis events results in biased classification labels, and classification tools using biased labels may lead to inaccurate estimations of metastasis potential. This issue is further complicated by the unknown metastasis prevalence at the population level, the small number of confirmed metastasis cases, and the high dimensionality of the candidate molecular features. Our proposed algorithm, called Positive and unlabeled Learning from Unbalanced cases and Sparse structures (PLUS), is the first to use a positive and unlabeled learning framework to account for the under-detection of metastasis events in building a classifier. PLUS is specifically tailored for studying metastasis that deals with the unbalanced instance allocation as well as unknown metastasis prevalence, which are not considered by other methods. PLUS achieves superior performance on synthetic datasets compared with other state-of-the-art methods. Application of PLUS to The Cancer Genome Atlas Pan-Cancer gene expression data generated metastasis potential predictions that show good agreement with the clinical follow-up data, in addition to predictive genes that have been validated by independent single-cell RNA-sequencing datasets.
Keyphrases
- papillary thyroid
- gene expression
- single cell
- squamous cell carcinoma
- squamous cell
- machine learning
- risk factors
- decision making
- cardiovascular disease
- small cell lung cancer
- lymph node metastasis
- coronary artery disease
- artificial intelligence
- mass spectrometry
- risk assessment
- young adults
- smoking cessation
- transcription factor
- cardiovascular events
- sensitive detection