Multi-modality machine learning predicting Parkinson’s disease

Author:

Makarious Mary B.ORCID,Leonard Hampton L.,Vitale Dan,Iwaki Hirotaka,Sargent Lana,Dadu Anant,Violich Ivo,Hutchins Elizabeth,Saffo David,Bandres-Ciga Sara,Kim Jonggeol Jeff,Song Yeajin,Maleknia Melina,Bookman Matt,Nojopranoto Willy,Campbell Roy H.ORCID,Hashemi Sayed Hadi,Botia Juan A.,Carter John F.,Craig David W.ORCID,Van Keuren-Jensen Kendall,Morris Huw R.ORCID,Hardy John A.,Blauwendraat CornelisORCID,Singleton Andrew B.ORCID,Faghri FarazORCID,Nalls Mike A.

Abstract

AbstractPersonalized medicine promises individualized disease prediction and treatment. The convergence of machine learning (ML) and available multimodal data is key moving forward. We build upon previous work to deliver multimodal predictions of Parkinson’s disease (PD) risk and systematically develop a model using GenoML, an automated ML package, to make improved multi-omic predictions of PD, validated in an external cohort. We investigated top features, constructed hypothesis-free disease-relevant networks, and investigated drug–gene interactions. We performed automated ML on multimodal data from the Parkinson’s progression marker initiative (PPMI). After selecting the best performing algorithm, all PPMI data was used to tune the selected model. The model was validated in the Parkinson’s Disease Biomarker Program (PDBP) dataset. Our initial model showed an area under the curve (AUC) of 89.72% for the diagnosis of PD. The tuned model was then tested for validation on external data (PDBP, AUC 85.03%). Optimizing thresholds for classification increased the diagnosis prediction accuracy and other metrics. Finally, networks were built to identify gene communities specific to PD. Combining data modalities outperforms the single biomarker paradigm. UPSIT and PRS contributed most to the predictive power of the model, but the accuracy of these are supplemented by many smaller effect transcripts and risk SNPs. Our model is best suited to identifying large groups of individuals to monitor within a health registry or biobank to prioritize for further testing. This approach allows complex predictive models to be reproducible and accessible to the community, with the package, code, and results publicly available.

Funder

U.S. Department of Health & Human Services | NIH | National Institute of Neurological Disorders and Stroke

GP2

AMP PD

Publisher

Springer Science and Business Media LLC

Subject

Cellular and Molecular Neuroscience,Neurology (clinical),Neurology

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