학술논문

Patient Graph Deep Learning to Predict Breast Cancer Molecular Subtype
Document Type
Periodical
Source
IEEE/ACM Transactions on Computational Biology and Bioinformatics IEEE/ACM Trans. Comput. Biol. and Bioinf. Computational Biology and Bioinformatics, IEEE/ACM Transactions on. 20(5):3117-3127 Jan, 2023
Subject
Bioengineering
Computing and Processing
Breast cancer
Feature extraction
Genomics
Bioinformatics
Cancer
Magnetic resonance imaging
Convolutional neural networks
Graph neural network
multimodal machine learning
radiogenomics
Language
ISSN
1545-5963
1557-9964
2374-0043
Abstract
Breast cancer is a heterogeneous disease consisting of a diverse set of genomic mutations and clinical characteristics. The molecular subtypes of breast cancer are closely tied to prognosis and therapeutic treatment options. We investigate using deep graph learning on a collection of patient factors from multiple diagnostic disciplines to better represent breast cancer patient information and predict molecular subtype. Our method models breast cancer patient data into a multi-relational directed graph with extracted feature embeddings to directly represent patient information and diagnostic test results. We develop a radiographic image feature extraction pipeline to produce vector representation of breast cancer tumors in DCE-MRI and an autoencoder-based genomic variant embedding method to map variant assay results to a low-dimensional latent space. We leverage related-domain transfer learning to train and evaluate a Relational Graph Convolutional Network to predict the probabilities of molecular subtypes for individual breast cancer patient graphs. Our work found that utilizing information from multiple multimodal diagnostic disciplines improved the model's prediction results and produced more distinct learned feature representations for breast cancer patients. This research demonstrates the capabilities of graph neural networks and deep learning feature representation to perform multimodal data fusion and representation in the breast cancer domain.