Machine learning integration of circulating and imaging biomarkers for explainable patient-specific prediction of cardiac events: A prospective study…

Posted: Published on November 26th, 2020

This post was added by Alex Diaz-Granados

This article was originally published here

Atherosclerosis. 2020 Nov 13:S0021-9150(20)31502-1. doi: 10.1016/j.atherosclerosis.2020.11.008. Online ahead of print.

ABSTRACT

BACKGROUND AND AIMS: We sought to assess the performance of a comprehensive machine learning (ML) risk score integrating circulating biomarkers and computed tomography (CT) measures for the long-term prediction of hard cardiac events in asymptomatic subjects.

METHODS: We studied 1069 subjects (age 58.2 8.2 years, 54.0% males) from the prospective EISNER trial who underwent coronary artery calcium (CAC) scoring CT, serum biomarker assessment, and long-term follow-up. Epicardial adipose tissue (EAT) was quantified from CT using fully automated deep learning software. Forty-eight serum biomarkers, both established and novel, were assayed. An ML algorithm (XGBoost) was trained using clinical risk factors, CT measures (CAC score, number of coronary lesions, aortic valve calcium score, EAT volume and attenuation), and circulating biomarkers, and validated using repeated 10-fold cross validation.

RESULTS: At 14.5 2.0 years, there were 50 hard cardiac events (myocardial infarction or cardiac death). The ML risk score (area under the receiver operator characteristic curve [AUC] 0.81) outperformed the CAC score (0.75) and ASCVD risk score (0.74; both p = 0.02) for the prediction of hard cardiac events. Serum biomarkers provided incremental prognostic value beyond clinical data and CT measures in the ML model (net reclassification index 0.53 [95% CI: 0.23-0.81], p < 0.0001). Among novel biomarkers, MMP-9, pentraxin 3, PIGR, and GDF-15 had highest variable importance for ML and reflect the pathways of inflammation, extracellular matrix remodeling, and fibrosis.

CONCLUSIONS: In this prospective study, ML integration of novel circulating biomarkers and noninvasive imaging measures provided superior long-term risk prediction for cardiac events compared to current risk assessment tools.

PMID:33239189 | DOI:10.1016/j.atherosclerosis.2020.11.008

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