Frontiers in Medicine (Feb 2023)

Analyzing breast cancer invasive disease event classification through explainable artificial intelligence

  • Raffaella Massafra,
  • Annarita Fanizzi,
  • Nicola Amoroso,
  • Nicola Amoroso,
  • Samantha Bove,
  • Maria Colomba Comes,
  • Domenico Pomarico,
  • Domenico Pomarico,
  • Vittorio Didonna,
  • Sergio Diotaiuti,
  • Luisa Galati,
  • Francesco Giotta,
  • Daniele La Forgia,
  • Agnese Latorre,
  • Angela Lombardi,
  • Annalisa Nardone,
  • Maria Irene Pastena,
  • Cosmo Maurizio Ressa,
  • Lucia Rinaldi,
  • Pasquale Tamborra,
  • Alfredo Zito,
  • Angelo Virgilio Paradiso,
  • Roberto Bellotti,
  • Roberto Bellotti,
  • Vito Lorusso

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3389/fmed.2023.1116354
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 10

Abstract

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IntroductionRecently, accurate machine learning and deep learning approaches have been dedicated to the investigation of breast cancer invasive disease events (IDEs), such as recurrence, contralateral and second cancers. However, such approaches are poorly interpretable.MethodsThus, we designed an Explainable Artificial Intelligence (XAI) framework to investigate IDEs within a cohort of 486 breast cancer patients enrolled at IRCCS Istituto Tumori “Giovanni Paolo II” in Bari, Italy. Using Shapley values, we determined the IDE driving features according to two periods, often adopted in clinical practice, of 5 and 10 years from the first tumor diagnosis.ResultsAge, tumor diameter, surgery type, and multiplicity are predominant within the 5-year frame, while therapy-related features, including hormone, chemotherapy schemes and lymphovascular invasion, dominate the 10-year IDE prediction. Estrogen Receptor (ER), proliferation marker Ki67 and metastatic lymph nodes affect both frames.DiscussionThus, our framework aims at shortening the distance between AI and clinical practice

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