Clinical and Molecular Hepatology (Jul 2024)

Conventional and machine learning-based risk scores for patients with early-stage hepatocellular carcinoma

  • Chun-Ting Ho,
  • Elise Chia-Hui Tan,
  • Pei-Chang Lee,
  • Chi-Jen Chu,
  • Yi-Hsiang Huang,
  • Teh-Ia Huo,
  • Yu-Hui Su,
  • Ming-Chih Hou,
  • Jaw-Ching Wu,
  • Chien-Wei Su

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3350/cmh.2024.0103
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 30, no. 3
pp. 406 – 420

Abstract

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Background/Aims The performance of machine learning (ML) in predicting the outcomes of patients with hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC) remains uncertain. We aimed to develop risk scores using conventional methods and ML to categorize early-stage HCC patients into distinct prognostic groups. Methods The study retrospectively enrolled 1,411 consecutive treatment-naïve patients with the Barcelona Clinic Liver Cancer (BCLC) stage 0 to A HCC from 2012 to 2021. The patients were randomly divided into a training cohort (n=988) and validation cohort (n=423). Two risk scores (CATS-IF and CATS-INF) were developed to predict overall survival (OS) in the training cohort using the conventional methods (Cox proportional hazards model) and ML-based methods (LASSO Cox regression), respectively. They were then validated and compared in the validation cohort. Results In the training cohort, factors for the CATS-IF score were selected by the conventional method, including age, curative treatment, single large HCC, serum creatinine and alpha-fetoprotein levels, fibrosis-4 score, lymphocyte-tomonocyte ratio, and albumin-bilirubin grade. The CATS-INF score, determined by ML-based methods, included the above factors and two additional ones (aspartate aminotransferase and prognostic nutritional index). In the validation cohort, both CATS-IF score and CATS-INF score outperformed other modern prognostic scores in predicting OS, with the CATSINF score having the lowest Akaike information criterion value. A calibration plot exhibited good correlation between predicted and observed outcomes for both scores. Conclusions Both the conventional Cox-based CATS-IF score and ML-based CATS-INF score effectively stratified patients with early-stage HCC into distinct prognostic groups, with the CATS-INF score showing slightly superior performance.

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