Frontiers in Oncology (May 2023)

Interpretable deep learning survival predictive tool for small cell lung cancer

  • Dongrui Zhang,
  • Baohua Lu,
  • Bowen Liang,
  • Bo Li,
  • Ziyu Wang,
  • Meng Gu,
  • Wei Jia,
  • Yuanming Pan

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3389/fonc.2023.1162181
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 13

Abstract

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BackgroundSmall cell lung cancer (SCLC) is an aggressive and almost universally lethal neoplasm. There is no accurate predictive method for its prognosis. Artificial intelligence deep learning may bring new hope.MethodsBy searching the Surveillance, Epidemiology, and End Results database (SEER), 21,093 patients’ clinical data were eventually included. Data were then divided into two groups (train dataset/test dataset). The train dataset (diagnosed in 2010–2014, N = 17,296) was utilized to conduct a deep learning survival model, validated by itself and the test dataset (diagnosed in 2015, N = 3,797) in parallel. According to clinical experience, age, sex, tumor site, T, N, M stage (7th American Joint Committee on Cancer TNM stage), tumor size, surgery, chemotherapy, radiotherapy, and history of malignancy were chosen as predictive clinical features. The C-index was the main indicator to evaluate model performance.ResultsThe predictive model had a 0.7181 C-index (95% confidence intervals, CIs, 0.7174–0.7187) in the train dataset and a 0.7208 C-index (95% CIs, 0.7202–0.7215) in the test dataset. These indicated that it had a reliable predictive value on OS for SCLC, so it was then packaged as a Windows software which is free for doctors, researchers, and patients to use.ConclusionThe interpretable deep learning survival predictive tool for small cell lung cancer developed by this study had a reliable predictive value on their overall survival. More biomarkers may help improve the prognostic predictive performance of small cell lung cancer.

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