QMLGMLSep 10, 2018

Estimate the Warfarin Dose by Ensemble of Machine Learning Algorithms

arXiv:1809.04069v2
Originality Incremental advance
AI Analysis

This work addresses the problem of precise warfarin dosing for patients, particularly those requiring low doses, but it is incremental as it builds on existing pharmacogenetic algorithms with ensemble methods.

The paper tackled the challenge of accurately predicting warfarin doses, which is critical due to individual variability and risks of adverse events, by developing stacked generalization algorithms that improved prediction accuracy, with a 12.7% increase in accuracy for Asians and 13.5% for low-dose groups compared to existing methods.

Warfarin dosing remains challenging due to narrow therapeutic index and highly individual variability. Incorrect warfarin dosing is associated with devastating adverse events. Remarkable efforts have been made to develop the machine learning based warfarin dosing algorithms incorporating clinical factors and genetic variants such as polymorphisms in CYP2C9 and VKORC1. The most widely validated pharmacogenetic algorithm is the IWPC algorithm based on multivariate linear regression (MLR). However, with only a single algorithm, the prediction performance may reach an upper limit even with optimal parameters. Here, we present novel algorithms using stacked generalization frameworks to estimate the warfarin dose, within which different types of machine learning algorithms function together through a meta-machine learning model to maximize the prediction accuracy. Compared to the IWPC-derived MLR algorithm, Stack 1 and 2 based on stacked generalization frameworks performed significantly better overall. Subgroup analysis revealed that the mean of the percentage of patients whose predicted dose of warfarin within 20% of the actual stable therapeutic dose (mean percentage within 20%) for Stack 1 was improved by 12.7% (from 42.47% to 47.86%) in Asians and by 13.5% (from 22.08% to 25.05%) in the low-dose group compared to that for MLR, respectively. These data suggest that our algorithms would especially benefit patients required low warfarin maintenance dose, as subtle changes in warfarin dose could lead to adverse clinical events (thrombosis or bleeding) in patients with low dose. Our study offers novel pharmacogenetic algorithms for clinical trials and practice.

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