Frontiers in Immunology (Nov 2022)

Assessing the efficacy of immunotherapy in lung squamous carcinoma using artificial intelligence neural network

  • Siqi Li,
  • Wei Li,
  • Tianyu Ma,
  • Siyun Fu,
  • Xiang Gao,
  • Na Qin,
  • Yuhua Wu,
  • Xinyong Zhang,
  • Jinghui Wang,
  • Jinghui Wang,
  • Yuanming Pan,
  • Zhidong Liu

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3389/fimmu.2022.1024707
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 13

Abstract

Read online

BackgroundAt present, immunotherapy is a very promising treatment method for lung cancer patients, while the factors affecting response are still controversial. It is crucial to predict the efficacy of lung squamous carcinoma patients who received immunotherapy.MethodsIn our retrospective study, we enrolled lung squamous carcinoma patients who received immunotherapy at Beijing Chest Hospital from January 2017 to November 2021. All patients were grouped into two cohorts randomly, the training cohort (80% of the total) and the test cohort (20% of the total). The training cohort was used to build neural network models to assess the efficacy and outcome of immunotherapy in lung squamous carcinoma based on clinical information. The main outcome was the disease control rate (DCR), and then the secondary outcomes were objective response rate (ORR), progression-free survival (PFS), and overall survival (OS).ResultsA total of 289 patients were included in this study. The DCR model had area under the receiver operating characteristic curve (AUC) value of 0.9526 (95%CI, 0.9088–0.9879) in internal validation and 0.9491 (95%CI, 0.8704–1.0000) in external validation. The ORR model had AUC of 0.8030 (95%CI, 0.7437–0.8545) in internal validation and 0.7040 (95%CI, 0.5457–0.8379) in external validation. The PFS model had AUC of 0.8531 (95%CI, 0.8024–0.8975) in internal validation and 0.7602 (95%CI, 0.6236–0.8733) in external validation. The OS model had AUC of 0.8006 (95%CI, 0.7995–0.8017) in internal validation and 0.7382 (95%CI, 0.7366–0.7398) in external validation.ConclusionsThe neural network models show benefits in the efficacy evaluation of immunotherapy to lung squamous carcinoma patients, especially the DCR and ORR models. In our retrospective study, we found that neoadjuvant and adjuvant immunotherapy may bring greater efficacy benefits to patients.

Keywords