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Machine Learning Predicts Outcomes of Phase III Clinical Trials for Prostate Cancer

Felix D. Beacher, Lilianne R. Mujica‐Parodi, Shreyash Gupta, Leonardo Ancora

2021Algorithms25 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

The ability to predict the individual outcomes of clinical trials could support the development of tools for precision medicine and improve the efficiency of clinical-stage drug development. However, there are no published attempts to predict individual outcomes of clinical trials for cancer. We used machine learning (ML) to predict individual responses to a two-year course of bicalutamide, a standard treatment for prostate cancer, based on data from three Phase III clinical trials (n = 3653). We developed models that used a merged dataset from all three studies. The best performing models using merged data from all three studies had an accuracy of 76%. The performance of these models was confirmed by further modeling using a merged dataset from two of the three studies, and a separate study for testing. Together, our results indicate the feasibility of ML-based tools for predicting cancer treatment outcomes, with implications for precision oncology and improving the efficiency of clinical-stage drug development.

Topics & Concepts

Prostate cancerClinical trialDrug developmentComputer scienceMachine learningArtificial intelligenceCancerMedicineMedical physicsDrugInternal medicinePsychiatryStatistical Methods in Clinical TrialsComputational Drug Discovery MethodsHealth Systems, Economic Evaluations, Quality of Life
Machine Learning Predicts Outcomes of Phase III Clinical Trials for Prostate Cancer | Litcius