Prediction of rectal toxicity of radiotherapy for prostate cancer based on multi-modality feature and multi-classifiers.
10.12122/j.issn.1673-4254.2019.08.15
- Author:
Qiang HE
1
;
Xuetao WANG
2
;
Xin LI
1
;
Xin ZHEN
1
Author Information
1. School of Biomedical Engineering, Southern Medical University, Guangzhou 510515, China.
2. Second Affiliated Hospital of Guangzhou University of Chinese Medicine, Guangzhou, 510120, China.
- Publication Type:Journal Article
- Keywords:
multi-classifier;
multi-criteria decision-making;
multi-modality;
prostate cancer radiotherapy;
rectal toxicity
- MeSH:
Algorithms;
Area Under Curve;
Humans;
Male;
Prostatic Neoplasms;
Rectum;
Retrospective Studies
- From:
Journal of Southern Medical University
2019;39(8):972-979
- CountryChina
- Language:Chinese
-
Abstract:
OBJECTIVE:To evaluate rectal toxicity of radiotherapy for prostate cancer using a novel predictive model based on multi-modality and multi-classifier fusion.
METHODS:We retrospectively collected the clinical data from 44 prostate cancer patients receiving external beam radiation (EBRT), including the treatment data, clinical parameters, planning CT data and the treatment plans. The clinical parameter features and dosimetric features were extracted as two different modality features, and a subset of features was selected to train the 5 base classifiers (SVM, Decision Tree, K-nearest-neighbor, Random forests and XGBoost). To establish the multi-modality and multi-classifier fusion model, a multi-criteria decision-making based weight assignment algorithm was used to assign weights for each base classifier under the same modality. A repeat 5-fold cross-validation and the 4 indexes including the area under ROC curve (AUC), accuracy, sensitivity and specificity were used to evaluate the proposed model. In addition, the proposed model was compared quantitatively with different feature selection methods, different weight allocation algorithms, the model based on single mode single classifier, and two integrated models using other fusion methods.
RESULTS:Repeated (5 times) 5-fold cross validation of the proposed model showed an accuracy of 0.78 for distinguishing toxicity from non-toxicity with an AUC of 0.83, a specificity of 0.79 and a sensitivity of 0.76.
CONCLUSIONS:Compared with the models based on a single mode or a single classifier and other fusion models, the proposed model can more accurately predict rectal toxicity of radiotherapy for prostate cancer.