AI Article Synopsis

  • * A machine learning model was developed and trained on clinical data to aid clinicians in determining the necessity of molecular profiling for patients, and its predictions were validated against decisions made by a molecular tumor board (MTB).
  • * The model demonstrated strong predictive accuracy, showing agreement with MTB experts in most cases, suggesting it could be a valuable tool for clinicians when deciding on molecular profiling for cancer patients.

Article Abstract

Background: Personalized medicine offers targeted therapy options for cancer treatment. However, the decision whether to include a patient into next-generation sequencing (NGS) testing is not standardized. This may result in some patients receiving unnecessary testing while others who could benefit from it are not tested. Typically, patients who have exhausted conventional treatment options are of interest for consideration in molecularly targeted therapy. To assist clinicians in decision-making, we developed a decision support tool using routine data from a precision oncology program.

Methods: We trained a machine learning model on clinical data to determine whether molecular profiling should be performed for a patient. To validate the model, the model's predictions were compared with decisions made by a molecular tumor board (MTB) using multiple patient case vignettes with their characteristics.

Results: The prediction model included 440 patients with molecular profiling and 13,587 patients without testing. High area under the curve (AUC) scores indicated the importance of engineered features in deciding on molecular profiling. Patient age, physical condition, tumor type, metastases, and previous therapies were the most important features. During the validation MTB experts made the same decision of recommending a patient for molecular profiling only in 10 out of 15 of their previous cases but there was agreement between the experts and the model in 9 out of 15 cases.

Conclusion: Based on a historical cohort, our predictive model has the potential to assist clinicians in deciding whether to perform molecular profiling.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC11006770PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s10238-024-01336-wDOI Listing

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