Autoencoder-assisted latent representation learning for survival prediction and multi-view clustering on multi-omics cancer subtyping
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Published:2023
Issue:12
Volume:20
Page:21098-21119
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ISSN:1551-0018
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Container-title:Mathematical Biosciences and Engineering
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language:
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Short-container-title:MBE
Author:
Zhu Shuwei1, Wang Wenping1, Fang Wei1, Cui Meiji2
Affiliation:
1. School of Artificial Intelligence and Computer Science, Jiangsu Provincial Engineering Laboratory of Pattern Recognition and Computational Intelligence, Jiangnan University, Wuxi 214122, China 2. School of Intelligent Manufacturing, Nanjing University of Science and Technology, Nanjing 210094, China
Abstract
<abstract><p>Cancer subtyping (or cancer subtypes identification) based on multi-omics data has played an important role in advancing diagnosis, prognosis and treatment, which triggers the development of advanced multi-view clustering algorithms. However, the high-dimension and heterogeneity of multi-omics data make great effects on the performance of these methods. In this paper, we propose to learn the informative latent representation based on autoencoder (AE) to naturally capture nonlinear omic features in lower dimensions, which is helpful for identifying the similarity of patients. Moreover, to take advantage of survival information or clinical information, a multi-omic survival analysis approach is embedded when integrating the similarity graph of heterogeneous data at the multi-omics level. Then, the clustering method is performed on the integrated similarity to generate subtype groups. In the experimental part, the effectiveness of the proposed framework is confirmed by evaluating five different multi-omics datasets, taken from The Cancer Genome Atlas. The results show that AE-assisted multi-omics clustering method can identify clinically significant cancer subtypes.</p></abstract>
Publisher
American Institute of Mathematical Sciences (AIMS)
Subject
Applied Mathematics,Computational Mathematics,General Agricultural and Biological Sciences,Modeling and Simulation,General Medicine
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