Abstract

AimsThe objective of this study was to develop a two-year overall survival model for inoperable stage I-III non–small cell lung cancer (NSCLC) patients using routine radiation oncology data over a federated (distributed) learning network and evaluate the potential of decision support for curative versus palliative radiotherapy. MethodsA federated infrastructure of data extraction, de-identification, standardisation, image analysis, and modelling was installed for seven clinics to obtain clinical and imaging features and survival information for patients treated in 2011–2019. A logistic regression model was trained for the 2011–2016 curative patient cohort and validated for the 2017–2019 cohort. Features were selected with univariate and model-based analysis and optimised using bootstrapping. System performance was assessed by the receiver operating characteristic (ROC) and corresponding area under curve (AUC), C-index, calibration metrics and Kaplan–Meier survival curves, with risk groups defined by model probability quartiles. Decision support was evaluated using a case-control analysis using propensity matching between treatment groups. Results1655 patient datasets were included. The overall model AUC was 0.68. Fifty-eight percent of patients treated with palliative radiotherapy had a low-to-moderate risk prediction according to the model, with survival times not significantly different (p = 0.87 and 0.061) from patients treated with curative radiotherapy classified as high-risk by the model. When survival was simulated by risk group and model-indicated treatment, there was an estimated 11% increase in survival rate at two years (p < 0.01). ConclusionFederated learning over multiple institution data can be used to develop and validate decision support systems for lung cancer while quantifying the potential impact of their use in practice. This paves the way for personalised medicine, where decisions can be based more closely on individual patient details from routine care.

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