GNLGMLNov 28, 2019

Effective Sub-clonal Cancer Representation to Predict Tumor Evolution

arXiv:1911.12774v11 citations
Originality Incremental advance
AI Analysis

This work addresses the challenge of predicting cancer evolution for patients and oncologists, but it appears incremental as it builds on existing modeling efforts by shifting to a data-driven method without proven results.

The paper tackles the problem of predicting tumor evolution by addressing Intra-Tumor Heterogeneity, proposing a data-driven machine learning method to represent sub-clonal characteristics and predict their growth, with the result being a novel approach that aims to improve treatment optimization by targeting likely growing sub-clones.

The majority of cancer treatments end in failure due to Intra-Tumor Heterogeneity (ITH). ITH in cancer is represented by clonal evolution where different sub-clones compete with each other for resources under conditions of Darwinian natural selection. Predicting the growth of these sub-clones within a tumour is among the key challenges of modern cancer research. Predicting tumor behavior enables the creation of risk profiles for patients and the optimisation of their treatment by therapeutically targeting sub-clones more likely to grow. Current research efforts in this space are focused on mathematical modelling of population genetics to quantify the selective advantage of sub-clones, thus enabling predictions of which sub-clones are more likely to grow. These tumor evolution models are based on assumptions which are not valid for real-world tumor micro-environment. Furthermore, these models are often fit on a single instance of a tumor, and hence prediction models cannot be validated. This paper presents an alternative approach for predicting cancer evolution using a data-driven machine learning method. Our proposed method is based on the intuition that if we can capture the true characteristics of sub-clones within a tumor and represent it in the form of features, a sophisticated machine learning algorithm can be trained to predict its behavior. The work presented here provides a novel approach to predicting cancer evolution, utilizing a data-driver approach. We strongly believe that the accumulation of data from microbiologists, oncologists and machine learning researchers could be used to encapsulate the true essence of tumor sub-clones, and can play a vital role in selecting the best cancer treatments for patients.

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