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Journal article

A machine-learning framework for robust and reliable prediction of short- and long-term treatment response in initially antipsychotic-naïve schizophrenia patients based on multimodal neuropsychiatric data

From

University of Copenhagen1

Department of Applied Mathematics and Computer Science, Technical University of Denmark2

Quantum Physics and Information Technology, Department of Physics, Technical University of Denmark3

Cognitive Systems, Department of Applied Mathematics and Computer Science, Technical University of Denmark4

H. Lundbeck A/S5

Utrecht University6

The reproducibility of machine-learning analyses in computational psychiatry is a growing concern. In a multimodal neuropsychiatric dataset of antipsychotic-naïve, first-episode schizophrenia patients, we discuss a workflow aimed at reducing bias and overfitting by invoking simulated data in the design process and analysis in two independent machine-learning approaches, one based on a single algorithm and the other incorporating an ensemble of algorithms.

We aimed to (1) classify patients from controls to establish the framework, (2) predict short- and long-term treatment response, and (3) validate the methodological framework. We included 138 antipsychotic-naïve, first-episode schizophrenia patients with data on psychopathology, cognition, electrophysiology, and structural magnetic resonance imaging (MRI).

Perinatal data and long-term outcome measures were obtained from Danish registers. Short-term treatment response was defined as change in Positive And Negative Syndrome Score (PANSS) after the initial antipsychotic treatment period. Baseline diagnostic classification algorithms also included data from 151 matched controls.

Both approaches significantly classified patients from healthy controls with a balanced accuracy of 63.8% and 64.2%, respectively. Post-hoc analyses showed that the classification primarily was driven by the cognitive data. Neither approach predicted short- nor long-term treatment response. Validation of the framework showed that choice of algorithm and parameter settings in the real data was successfully guided by results from the simulated data.

In conclusion, this novel approach holds promise as an important step to minimize bias and obtain reliable results with modest sample sizes when independent replication samples are not available.

Language: English
Publisher: Nature Publishing Group UK
Year: 2020
Pages: 276
Proceedings: 2020 Schizophrenia International Research Society Conference
ISSN: 21583188
Types: Journal article
DOI: 10.1038/s41398-020-00962-8
ORCIDs: 0000-0002-5638-2357 , 0000-0003-0664-7924 , Foldager, Jonathan , 0000-0002-6921-220X , 0000-0002-9565-0238 , Axelsen, Martin C. and Hansen, Lars K.

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