Utilizing multimodal AI to improve genetic analyses of cardiovascular traits

Author:

Zhou Yuchen,Cosentino Justin,Yun Taedong,Biradar Mahantesh I.,Shreibati Jacqueline,Lai Dongbing,Schwantes-An Tae-Hwi,Luben Robert,McCaw ZacharyORCID,Engmann Jorgen,Providencia Rui,Schmidt Amand FloriaanORCID,Munroe PatriciaORCID,Yang Howard,Carroll Andrew,Khawaja Anthony P.ORCID,McLean Cory Y.,Behsaz Babak,Hormozdiari FarhadORCID

Abstract

AbstractElectronic health records, biobanks, and wearable biosensors contain multiple high-dimensional clinical data (HDCD) modalities (e.g., ECG, Photoplethysmography (PPG), and MRI) for each individual. Access to multimodal HDCD provides a unique opportunity for genetic studies of complex traits because different modalities relevant to a single physiological system (e.g., circulatory system) encode complementary and overlapping information. We propose a novel multimodal deep learning method, M-REGLE, for discovering genetic associations from a joint representation of multiple complementary HDCD modalities. We showcase the effectiveness of this model by applying it to several cardiovascular modalities. M-REGLE jointly learns a lower representation (i.e., latent factors) of multimodal HDCD using a convolutional variational autoencoder, performs genome wide association studies (GWAS) on each latent factor, then combines the results to study the genetics of the underlying system. To validate the advantages of M-REGLE and multimodal learning, we apply it to common cardiovascular modalities (PPG and ECG), and compare its results to unimodal learning methods in which representations are learned from each data modality separately, but the downstream genetic analyses are performed on the combined unimodal representations. M-REGLE identifies 19.3% more loci on the 12-lead ECG dataset, 13.0% more loci on the ECG lead I + PPG dataset, and its genetic risk score significantly outperforms the unimodal risk score at predicting cardiac phenotypes, such as atrial fibrillation (Afib), in multiple biobanks.

Publisher

Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory

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