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Journal Article

How to predict relapse in leukemia using time series data: A comparative in silico study

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Scherf,  Nico
Institute for Medical Informatics and Biometry, University Hospital Carl Gustav Carus, Dresden, Germany;
Method and Development Group Neural Data Science and Statistical Computing, MPI for Human Cognitive and Brain Sciences, Max Planck Society;

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Citation

Hoffmann, H., Baldow, C., Zerjatke, T., Gottschalk, A., Wagner, S., Karg, E., et al. (2021). How to predict relapse in leukemia using time series data: A comparative in silico study. PLoS One, 16(11): e0256585. doi:10.1371/journal.pone.0256585.


Cite as: https://hdl.handle.net/21.11116/0000-000A-182B-C
Abstract
Risk stratification and treatment decisions for leukemia patients are regularly based on clinical markers determined at diagnosis, while measurements on system dynamics are often neglected. However, there is increasing evidence that linking quantitative time-course information to disease outcomes can improve the predictions for patient-specific treatment responses. We designed a synthetic experiment simulating response kinetics of 5,000 patients to compare different computational methods with respect to their ability to accurately predict relapse for chronic and acute myeloid leukemia treatment. Technically, we used clinical reference data to first fit a model and then generate de novo model simulations of individual patients’ time courses for which we can systematically tune data quality (i.e. measurement error) and quantity (i.e. number of measurements). Based hereon, we compared the prediction accuracy of three different computational methods, namely mechanistic models, generalized linear models, and deep neural networks that have been fitted to the reference data. Reaching prediction accuracies between 60 and close to 100%, our results indicate that data quality has a higher impact on prediction accuracy than the specific choice of the particular method. We further show that adapted treatment and measurement schemes can considerably improve the prediction accuracy by 10 to 20%. Our proof-of-principle study highlights how computational methods and optimized data acquisition strategies can improve risk assessment and treatment of leukemia patients.