Faecal microbiome-based machine learning for multi-class disease diagnosis.
Qi SuQin LiuRaphaela Iris LauJingwan ZhangZhilu XuYun Kit YeohThomas W H LeungWhitney TangLin ZhangJessie Qiaoyi LiangYuk Kam YauJiaying ZhengChengyu LiuMengjing ZhangChun Pan CheungJessica Y L ChingHein M TunXin YuFrancis K L ChanWilliam K K WuPublished in: Nature communications (2022)
Systemic characterisation of the human faecal microbiome provides the opportunity to develop non-invasive approaches in the diagnosis of a major human disease. However, shared microbial signatures across different diseases make accurate diagnosis challenging in single-disease models. Herein, we present a machine-learning multi-class model using faecal metagenomic dataset of 2,320 individuals with nine well-characterised phenotypes, including colorectal cancer, colorectal adenomas, Crohn's disease, ulcerative colitis, irritable bowel syndrome, obesity, cardiovascular disease, post-acute COVID-19 syndrome and healthy individuals. Our processed data covers 325 microbial species derived from 14.3 terabytes of sequence. The trained model achieves an area under the receiver operating characteristic curve (AUROC) of 0.90 to 0.99 (Interquartile range, IQR, 0.91-0.94) in predicting different diseases in the independent test set, with a sensitivity of 0.81 to 0.95 (IQR, 0.87-0.93) at a specificity of 0.76 to 0.98 (IQR 0.83-0.95). Metagenomic analysis from public datasets of 1,597 samples across different populations observes comparable predictions with AUROC of 0.69 to 0.91 (IQR 0.79-0.87). Correlation of the top 50 microbial species with disease phenotypes identifies 363 significant associations (FDR < 0.05). This microbiome-based multi-disease model has potential clinical application in disease diagnostics and treatment response monitoring and warrants further exploration.
Keyphrases
- machine learning
- cardiovascular disease
- endothelial cells
- microbial community
- sars cov
- metabolic syndrome
- irritable bowel syndrome
- ulcerative colitis
- coronavirus disease
- gene expression
- risk assessment
- genome wide
- adipose tissue
- big data
- artificial intelligence
- mental health
- dna methylation
- high resolution
- skeletal muscle
- extracorporeal membrane oxygenation
- cardiovascular risk factors
- rna seq
- amino acid