Published in:
24-03-2022 | Cytostatic Therapy | Original Article – Cancer Research
A retrospective analysis using deep-learning models for prediction of survival outcome and benefit of adjuvant chemotherapy in stage II/III colorectal cancer
Authors:
Xingyu Li, Jitendra Jonnagaddala, Shuhua Yang, Hong Zhang, Xu Steven Xu
Published in:
Journal of Cancer Research and Clinical Oncology
|
Issue 8/2022
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Abstract
Purpose
Most of Stage II/III colorectal cancer (CRC) patients can be cured by surgery alone, and only certain CRC patients benefit from adjuvant chemotherapy. Risk stratification based on deep-learning from haematoxylin and eosin (H&E) images has been postulated as a potential predictive biomarker for benefit from adjuvant chemotherapy. However, very limited success has been achieved in using biomarkers, including deep-learning-based markers, to facilitate the decision for adjuvant chemotherapy despite recent advances of artificial intelligence.
Methods
We trained and internally validated CRCNet using 780 Stage II/III CRC patients from Molecular and Cellular Oncology. Independent external validation of the model was performed using 337 Stage II/III CRC patients from The Cancer Genome Atlas (TCGA).
Results
CRCNet stratified the patients into high, medium, and low-risk subgroups. Multivariate Cox regression analyses confirmed that CRCNet risk groups are statistically significant after adjusting for existing risk factors. The high-risk subgroup significantly benefits from adjuvant chemotherapy. A hazard ratio (chemo-treated vs untreated) of 0.2 (95% Confidence Interval (CI), 0.05–0.65; P = 0.009) and 0.6 (95% CI 0.42–0.98; P = 0.038) are observed in the TCGA and MCO Fluorouracil-treated patients, respectively. Conversely, no significant benefit from chemotherapy is observed in the low- and medium-risk groups (P = 0.2–1).
Conclusion
The retrospective analysis provides further evidence that H&E image-based biomarkers may potentially be of great use in delivering treatments following surgery for Stage II/III CRC, improving patient survival, and avoiding unnecessary treatment and associated toxicity, and warrants further validation on other datasets and prospective confirmation in clinical trials.