使用性能结果测量和人口统计数据预测多发性硬化症的残疾

Subhrajit Roy, Diana Mincu, Lev Proleev, Negar Rostamzadeh, Chintan Ghate, Natalie Harris, Christina Chen, J. Schrouff, Nenad Tomašev, F. Hartsell, K. Heller
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引用次数: 5

摘要

关于多发性硬化症机器学习的文献主要集中在使用神经成像数据,如磁共振成像和临床实验室测试来识别疾病。然而,研究表明,这些模式与疾病活动,如症状或疾病进展不一致。此外,从这些方式收集数据的费用很高,导致评价很少。在这项工作中,我们使用多维的、可负担的、基于物理和智能手机的性能结果测量(POM),并结合人口统计数据来预测多发性硬化症的进展。我们对两个数据集进行了严格的基准测试,并在13个临床可操作的预测终点和6个机器学习模型中给出了结果。据我们所知,我们的研究结果首次表明,在临床试验和基于智能手机的研究中,通过使用两个数据集,使用POMs和人口统计数据可以预测疾病进展。此外,我们通过特征消融研究来研究我们的模型,以了解不同的pom和人口统计学对模型性能的影响。我们还表明,模型的性能在不同的人口统计亚组(基于年龄和性别)中是相似的。为了实现这项工作,我们开发了一个端到端可重用的预处理和机器学习框架,允许在不同的MS数据集上进行更快的实验。
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Disability prediction in multiple sclerosis using performance outcome measures and demographic data
Literature on machine learning for multiple sclerosis has primarily focused on the use of neuroimaging data such as magnetic resonance imaging and clinical laboratory tests for disease identification. However, studies have shown that these modalities are not consistent with disease activity such as symptoms or disease progression. Furthermore, the cost of collecting data from these modalities is high, leading to scarce evaluations. In this work, we used multi-dimensional, affordable, physical and smartphone-based performance outcome measures (POM) in conjunction with demographic data to predict multiple sclerosis disease progression. We performed a rigorous benchmarking exercise on two datasets and present results across 13 clinically actionable prediction endpoints and 6 machine learning models. To the best of our knowledge, our results are the first to show that it is possible to predict disease progression using POMs and demographic data in the context of both clinical trials and smartphone-base studies by using two datasets. Moreover, we investigate our models to understand the impact of different POMs and demographics on model performance through feature ablation studies. We also show that model performance is similar across different demographic subgroups (based on age and sex). To enable this work, we developed an end-to-end reusable pre-processing and machine learning framework which allows quicker experimentation over disparate MS datasets.
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