Motivation Survival analysis using gene expression profiles plays a crucial role in the interpretation of clinical research and assessment of disease therapy programs. Several prediction models have been developed to explore the relationship between patients’ covariates and survival. However, the high-dimensional genomic features limit the prediction performance of the survival model. Thus, an accurate and reliable prediction model is necessary for survival analysis using high-dimensional genomic data. Results In this study, we proposed an improved survival prediction model based on XGBoost framework called XGBLC, which used Lasso-Cox to enhance the ability to analyze high-dimensional genomic data. The novel first and second order gradient statistics of Lasso-Cox were defined to construct the loss function of XGBLC. We extensively tested our XGBLC algorithm on both simulated and real world datasets, and estimated the performance of models with 5-fold cross-validation. Based on 20 cancer datasets from The Cancer Genome Atlas (TCGA), XGBLC outperforms five state-of-the-art survival methods in terms of C-index, Brier score and AUC. The results show that XGBLC still keeps good accuracy and robustness by comparing the performance on the simulated datasets with different scales. The developed prediction model would be beneficial for physicians to understand the effects of patient’s genomic characteristics on survival and make personalized treatment decisions. Availability and implementation The implementation of XGBLC algorithm based on R language is available at: https://github.com/lab319/XGBLC Supplementary information Supplementary data are available at Bioinformatics online.
The potential role of DNA methylation from paracancerous tissues in cancer diagnosis has not been explored until now. In this study, we built classification models using well-known machine learning models based on DNA methylation profiles of paracancerous tissues. We evaluated our methods on nine cancer datasets collected from The Cancer Genome Atlas (TCGA) and utilized fivefold cross-validation to assess the performance of models. Additionally, we performed gene ontology (GO) enrichment analysis on the basis of the significant CpG sites selected by feature importance scores of XGBoost model, aiming to identify biological pathways involved in cancer progression. We also exploited the XGBoost algorithm to classify cancer types using DNA methylation profiles of paracancerous tissues in external validation datasets. Comparative experiments suggested that XGBoost achieved better predictive performance than the other four machine learning methods in predicting cancer stage. GO enrichment analysis revealed key pathways involved, highlighting the importance of paracancerous tissues in cancer progression. Furthermore, XGBoost model can accurately classify nine different cancers from TCGA, and the feature sets selected by XGBoost can also effectively predict seven cancer types on independent GEO datasets. This study provided new insights into cancer diagnosis from an epigenetic perspective and may facilitate the development of personalized diagnosis and treatment strategies.
<abstract> <p>Most kidney cancers are kidney renal clear cell carcinoma (KIRC) that is a main cause of cancer-related deaths. Polygenic risk score (PRS) is a weighted linear combination of phenotypic related alleles on the genome that can be used to assess KIRC risk. However, standalone SNP data as input to the PRS model may not provide satisfactory result. Therefore, Transcriptional risk scores (TRS) based on multi-omics data and machine learning models were proposed to assess the risk of KIRC. First, we collected four types of multi-omics data (DNA methylation, miRNA, mRNA and lncRNA) of KIRC patients from the TCGA database. Subsequently, a novel TRS method utilizing multiple omics data and XGBoost model was developed. Finally, we performed prevalence analysis and prognosis prediction to evaluate the utility of the TRS generated by our method. Our TRS methods exhibited better predictive performance than the linear models and other machine learning models. Furthermore, the prediction accuracy of combined TRS model was higher than that of single-omics TRS model. The KM curves showed that TRS was a valid prognostic indicator for cancer staging. Our proposed method extended the current definition of TRS from standalone SNP data to multi-omics data and was superior to the linear models and other machine learning models, which may provide a useful implement for diagnostic and prognostic prediction of KIRC.</p> </abstract>
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