A Cost-Effective Model for Predicting Recurrent Gastric Cancer Using Clinical Features.
Chun-Chia ChenWen-Chien TingHsi-Chieh LeeChi-Chang ChangTsung-Chieh LinChiao-Wen LinPublished in: Diagnostics (Basel, Switzerland) (2024)
This study used artificial intelligence techniques to identify clinical cancer biomarkers for recurrent gastric cancer survivors. From a hospital-based cancer registry database in Taiwan, the datasets of the incidence of recurrence and clinical risk features were included in 2476 gastric cancer survivors. We benchmarked Random Forest using MLP, C4.5, AdaBoost, and Bagging algorithms on metrics and leveraged the synthetic minority oversampling technique (SMOTE) for imbalanced dataset issues, cost-sensitive learning for risk assessment, and SHapley Additive exPlanations (SHAPs) for feature importance analysis in this study. Our proposed Random Forest outperformed the other models with an accuracy of 87.9%, a recall rate of 90.5%, an accuracy rate of 86%, and an F1 of 88.2% on the recurrent category by a 10-fold cross-validation in a balanced dataset. We identified clinical features of recurrent gastric cancer, which are the top five features, stage, number of regional lymph node involvement, Helicobacter pylori , BMI (body mass index), and gender; these features significantly affect the prediction model's output and are worth paying attention to in the following causal effect analysis. Using an artificial intelligence model, the risk factors for recurrent gastric cancer could be identified and cost-effectively ranked according to their feature importance. In addition, they should be crucial clinical features to provide physicians with the knowledge to screen high-risk patients in gastric cancer survivors as well.
Keyphrases
- artificial intelligence
- machine learning
- deep learning
- helicobacter pylori
- big data
- lymph node
- risk assessment
- young adults
- papillary thyroid
- end stage renal disease
- climate change
- primary care
- healthcare
- squamous cell
- body mass index
- helicobacter pylori infection
- working memory
- neoadjuvant chemotherapy
- mental health
- squamous cell carcinoma
- human health
- lymph node metastasis
- adverse drug
- patient reported outcomes