Survival analysis in medical research has witnessed a growing interest in applying deep learning techniques to model complex, high-dimensional, heterogeneous, incomplete, and censored data. Current methods make assumptions about the relations between data that may not be valid in practice. Therefore, we introduce SAVAE (Survival Analysis Variational Autoencoder).
View Article and Find Full Text PDFDrug repurposing aims to find new therapeutic applications for existing drugs in the pharmaceutical market, leading to significant savings in time and cost. The use of artificial intelligence and knowledge graphs to propose repurposing candidates facilitates the process, as large amounts of data can be processed. However, it is important to pay attention to the explainability needed to validate the predictions.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFEstimating treatment effects from observational data in medicine using causal inference is a very relevant task due to the abundance of observational data and the ethical and cost implications of conducting randomized experiments or experimental interventions. However, how could we estimate the effect of a treatment in a hospital that has very restricted access to treatment? In this paper, we want to address the problem of distributed causal inference, where hospitals not only have different distributions of patients, but also different treatment assignment criteria. Furthermore, it is necessary to take into account that due to privacy restrictions, personal patient data cannot be shared between hospitals.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPurpose: Rare cancers constitute over 20% of human neoplasms, often affecting patients with unmet medical needs. The development of effective classification and prognostication systems is crucial to improve the decision-making process and drive innovative treatment strategies. We have created and implemented MOSAIC, an artificial intelligence (AI)-based framework designed for multimodal analysis, classification, and personalized prognostic assessment in rare cancers.
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