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Using deep learning to predict survival outcome in non-surgical cervical cancer patients based on pathological images.

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Abstract

We analyzed clinical features and the representative HE-stained pathologic images to predict 5-year overall survival via the deep-learning approach in cervical cancer patients in order to assist oncologists in designing the optimal treatment strategies.The research retrospectively collected 238 non-surgical cervical cancer patients treated with radiochemotherapy from 2014 to 2017. These patients were randomly divided into the training set (nā€‰=ā€‰165) and test set (nā€‰=ā€‰73). Then, we extract deep features after segmenting the HE-stained image into patches of size 224 Ɨ 224. A Lasso-Cox model was constructed with clinical data to predict 5-year OS. C-index evaluated this model performance with 95% CI, calibration curve, and ROC.Based on multivariate analysis, 2 of 11 clinical characteristics (C-index 0.68) and 2 of 2048 pathomic features (C-index 0.74) and clinical-pathomic model (C-index 0.83) of nomograms predict 5-year survival in the training set, respectively. In test set, compared with the pathomic and clinical characteristics used alone, the clinical-pathomic model had an AUC of 0.750 (95% CI 0.540-0.959), the clinical predictor model had an AUC of 0.729 (95% CI 0.551-0.909), and the pathomic model AUC was 0.703 (95% CI 0.487-0.919). Based on appropriate nomogram scores, we divided patients into high-risk and low-risk groups, and Kaplan-Meier survival probability curves for both groups showed statistical differences.We built a clinical-pathomic model to predict 5-year OS in non-surgical cervical cancer patients, which may be a promising method to improve the precision of personalized therapy.Ā© 2023. The Author(s).

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