Deep Learning-based Recalibration of the CUETO and EORTC Prediction Tools for Recurrence and Progression of Non-muscle-invasive Bladder Cancer. Academic Article uri icon

Overview

abstract

  • Despite being standard tools for decision-making, the European Organisation for Research and Treatment of Cancer (EORTC), European Association of Urology (EAU), and Club Urologico Espanol de Tratamiento Oncologico (CUETO) risk groups provide moderate performance in predicting recurrence-free survival (RFS) and progression-free survival (PFS) in non-muscle-invasive bladder cancer (NMIBC). In this retrospective combined-cohort data-mining study, the training group consisted of 3570 patients with de novo diagnosed NMIBC. Predictors included gender, age, T stage, histopathological grading, tumor burden and diameter, EORTC and CUETO scores, and type of intravesical treatment. The models developed were externally validated using an independent cohort of 322 patients. Models were trained using Cox proportional-hazards deep neural networks (deep learning; DeepSurv) with a proprietary grid search of hyperparameters. For patients treated with surgery and bacillus Calmette-Guérin-treated patients, the models achieved a c index of 0.650 (95% confidence interval [CI] 0.649-0.650) for RFS and 0.878 (95% CI 0.873-0.874) for PFS in the training group. In the validation group, the c index was 0.651 (95% CI 0.648-0.654) for RFS and 0.881 (95% CI 0.878-0.885) for PFS. After inclusion of patients treated with mitomycin C, the c index for RFS models was 0.6415 (95% CI 0.6412-0.6417) for the training group and 0.660 (95% CI 0.657-0.664) for the validation group. Models for PFS achieved a c index of 0.885 (95% CI 0.885-0.885) for the training set and 0.876 (95% CI 0.873-0.880) for the validation set. Our tool outperformed standard-of-care risk stratification tools and showed no evidence of overfitting. The application is open source and available at https://biostat.umed.pl/deepNMIBC/. PATIENT SUMMARY: We created and validated a new tool to predict recurrence and progression of early-stage bladder cancer. The application uses advanced artificial intelligence to combine state-of-the-art scales, outperforms these scales for prediction, and is freely available online.

publication date

  • June 3, 2021

Research

keywords

  • Deep Learning
  • Urinary Bladder Neoplasms

Identity

Digital Object Identifier (DOI)

  • 10.1016/j.euo.2021.05.006

PubMed ID

  • 34092528