Abstract

Breast cancer, the predominant malignancy among women, is characterized by significant heterogeneity, leading to the emergence of distinct molecular subtypes. Accurate differentiation of these molecular subtypes holds paramount clinical significance, owing to substantial variations in prognosis, therapeutic strategies, and survival outcomes. In this study, we propose a cross-sequence joint representation and hypergraph convolution network (CORONet) for classifying molecular subtypes of breast cancer using incomplete DCE-MRI. Specifically, we first build a cross-sequence joint representation (COR) module to integrate image imputation and feature representation into a unified framework, encouraging effective feature extraction for subsequent classification. Then, we fuse multiple COR features and applied feature selection to reduce the redundant information between sequences. Finally, we deploy hypergraph structures to model high-order correlation among different subjects and extracted high-level semantic features by hypergraph convolutions for molecular subtyping. Extensive experiments on incomplete DCE-MRIs of 395 patients from the TCIA repository showed a significant improvement of our CORONet over state of the arts, with the area under the curve (AUC) of 0.891 and 0.903 for luminal and triple-negative (TN) subtype prediction, respectively. Similar advantages of CORONet were also confirmed in partial complete DCE-MRIs of 144 patients, achieving an AUC of 0.858 and 0.832 for predicting luminal and TN subtypes of breast cancer, respectively. Nevertheless, both of these values were lower compared to the scenario where DCE-MRIs from all 395 patients were utilized. Our study contributes to the precise molecular subtyping using incomplete multi-sequence DCE-MRI, thereby offering promising prospects for future risk stratification of breast cancer patients.

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