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A cross-study analysis of drug response prediction in cancer cell lines

  1. Author:
    Xia, Fangfang
    Allen, Jonathan
    Balaprakash, Prasanna
    Brettin, Thomas
    Garcia-Cardona, Cristina
    Clyde, Austin
    Cohn, Judith
    Doroshow,Jim
    Duan, Xiaotian
    Dubinkina, Veronika
    Evrard,Yvonne
    Fan, Ya Ju
    Gans, Jason
    He, Stewart
    Lu,Pinyi
    Maslov, Sergei
    Partin, Alexander
    Shukla, Maulik
    Stahlberg,Eric
    Wozniak, Justin M
    Yoo, Hyunseung
    Zaki,George
    Zhu, Yitan
    Stevens, Rick
  2. Author Address

    Argonne National Laboratory., Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory., Los Alamos National Laboratory., University of Chicago., National Cancer Institute., University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign., Frederick National Laboratory for Cancer Research.,
    1. Year: 2021
    2. Date: Sep 14
    3. Epub Date: 2021 Sep 14
  1. Journal: Briefings in Bioinformatics
  2. Type of Article: Article
  1. Abstract:

    To enable personalized cancer treatment, machine learning models have been developed to predict drug response as a function of tumor and drug features. However, most algorithm development efforts have relied on cross-validation within a single study to assess model accuracy. While an essential first step, cross-validation within a biological data set typically provides an overly optimistic estimate of the prediction performance on independent test sets. To provide a more rigorous assessment of model generalizability between different studies, we use machine learning to analyze five publicly available cell line-based data sets: National Cancer Institute 60, ancer Therapeutics Response Portal (CTRP), Genomics of Drug Sensitivity in Cancer, Cancer Cell Line Encyclopedia and Genentech Cell Line Screening Initiative (gCSI). Based on observed experimental variability across studies, we explore estimates of prediction upper bounds. We report performance results of a variety of machine learning models, with a multitasking deep neural network achieving the best cross-study generalizability. By multiple measures, models trained on CTRP yield the most accurate predictions on the remaining testing data, and gCSI is the most predictable among the cell line data sets included in this study. With these experiments and further simulations on partial data, two lessons emerge: (1) differences in viability assays can limit model generalizability across studies and (2) drug diversity, more than tumor diversity, is crucial for raising model generalizability in preclinical screening. © The Author(s) 2021. Published by Oxford University Press.

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External Sources

  1. DOI: 10.1093/bib/bbab356
  2. PMID: 34524425
  3. PII : 6370300

Library Notes

  1. Fiscal Year: FY2020-2021
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