Extending information retrieval methods to personalized genomic-based studies of disease

Shuyun Ye, John A. Dawson, Christina Kendziorski

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

2 Scopus citations

Abstract

Genomic-based studies of disease now involve diverse types of data collected on large groups of patients. A major challenge facing statistical scientists is how best to combine the data, extract important features, and comprehensively characterize the ways in which they affect an individual’s disease course and likelihood of response to treatment. We have developed a survival-supervised latent Dirichlet allocation (survLDA) modeling framework to address these challenges. Latent Dirichlet allocation (LDA) models have proven extremely effective at identifying themes common across large collections of text, but applications to genomics have been limited. Our framework extends LDA to the genome by considering each patient as a “document” with “text” detailing his/her clinical events and genomic state. We then further extend the framework to allow for supervision by a time-to-event response. The model enables the efficient identification of collections of clinical and genomic features that co-occur within patient subgroups, and then characterizes each patient by those features. An application of survLDA to The Cancer Genome Atlas ovarian project identifies informative patient subgroups showing differential response to treatment, and validation in an independent cohort demonstrates the potential for patient-specific inference.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)85-95
Number of pages11
JournalCancer Informatics
Volume13
Issue numberSuppl. 7
DOIs
StatePublished - 2014

Keywords

  • Cancer
  • Genomicsa
  • Latent Dirichlet allocation
  • Survival
  • Time-to-event

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