Decoding biological age from face photographs using deep learning

Author:

Zalay Osbert,Bontempi DennisORCID,Bitterman Danielle S,Birkbak NicolaiORCID,Shyr Derek,Haugg Fridolin,Qian Jack MORCID,Roberts HannahORCID,Perni Subha,Prudente Vasco,Pai Suraj,Dekker AndreORCID,Haibe-Kains Benjamin,Guthier Christian,Balboni Tracy,Warren Laura,Krishan Monica,Kann Benjamin HORCID,Swanton CharlesORCID,Ruysscher Dirk De,Mak Raymond HORCID,Aerts Hugo JWLORCID

Abstract

ABSTRACTBecause humans age at different rates, a person’s physical appearance may yield insights into their biological age and physiological health more reliably than their chronological age. In medicine, however, appearance is incorporated into medical judgments in a subjective and non-standardized fashion. In this study, we developed and validated FaceAge, a deep learning system to estimate biological age from easily obtainable and low-cost face photographs. FaceAge was trained on data from 58,851 healthy individuals, and clinical utility was evaluated on data from 6,196 patients with cancer diagnoses from two institutions in the United States and The Netherlands. To assess the prognostic relevance of FaceAge estimation, we performed Kaplan Meier survival analysis. To test a relevant clinical application of FaceAge, we assessed the performance of FaceAge in end-of-life patients with metastatic cancer who received palliative treatment by incorporating FaceAge into clinical prediction models. We found that, on average, cancer patients look older than their chronological age, and looking older is correlated with worse overall survival. FaceAge demonstrated significant independent prognostic performance in a range of cancer types and stages. We found that FaceAge can improve physicians’ survival predictions in incurable patients receiving palliative treatments, highlighting the clinical utility of the algorithm to support end-of-life decision-making. FaceAge was also significantly associated with molecular mechanisms of senescence through gene analysis, while age was not. These findings may extend to diseases beyond cancer, motivating using deep learning algorithms to translate a patient’s visual appearance into objective, quantitative, and clinically useful measures.

Publisher

Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory

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