Scientific Reports (May 2021)

Weakly supervised temporal model for prediction of breast cancer distant recurrence

  • Josh Sanyal,
  • Amara Tariq,
  • Allison W. Kurian,
  • Daniel Rubin,
  • Imon Banerjee

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1038/s41598-021-89033-6
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 11, no. 1
pp. 1 – 11

Abstract

Read online

Abstract Efficient prediction of cancer recurrence in advance may help to recruit high risk breast cancer patients for clinical trial on-time and can guide a proper treatment plan. Several machine learning approaches have been developed for recurrence prediction in previous studies, but most of them use only structured electronic health records and only a small training dataset, with limited success in clinical application. While free-text clinic notes may offer the greatest nuance and detail about a patient’s clinical status, they are largely excluded in previous predictive models due to the increase in processing complexity and need for a complex modeling framework. In this study, we developed a weak-supervision framework for breast cancer recurrence prediction in which we trained a deep learning model on a large sample of free-text clinic notes by utilizing a combination of manually curated labels and NLP-generated non-perfect recurrence labels. The model was trained jointly on manually curated data from 670 patients and NLP-curated data of 8062 patients. It was validated on manually annotated data from 224 patients with recurrence and achieved 0.94 AUROC. This weak supervision approach allowed us to learn from a larger dataset using imperfect labels and ultimately provided greater accuracy compared to a smaller hand-curated dataset, with less manual effort invested in curation.