深度学习利用阴道微生物群实现早产的早期预测

Kaushik Karambelkar, Mayank Baranwal
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摘要

目的:早产(PTB)是影响婴儿健康的主要问题之一,也是困扰世界各地的一个问题。最近,阴道微生物群落在早产方面引起了人们的关注,然而,不同个体的阴道微生物群落差异很大,而且这种差异在种族、民族和地域不同的人群中更为明显。此外,据报道,微生物群落在怀孕期间会发生演变,而捕捉这种特征可能需要更高、更复杂的建模范例。在本研究中,我们开发了一个基于神经控制微分方程(CDEs)的框架,用于从不规则采样的阴道微生物丰度数据中识别种族多样化队列中的早期 PTB。方法:我们利用从怀孕不同阶段的阴道拭子中获取的 16S rRNA 序列,获得了阴道微生物群中微生物物种的相对丰度。我们采用了最近推出的一种称为 "神经 CDE "的深度学习范式来预测 PTB。这种方法以时间序列的形式分析不规则采样的微生物丰度剖面,这在以前还没有被探索过:结果:我们的框架能够识别妊娠期~2 个月期间随时间演变的阴道微生物群特征,并能预测 PTB 的发病率(平均测试集 ROC-AUC = 0.81,准确率 = 0.75,f1 得分 = 0.71),明显优于传统的 ML 分类器,从而实现了有效的早期 PTB 风险评估。结论和意义:我们的方法使用不规则采样的微生物丰度曲线进行训练,但仍能准确区分足月儿和早产儿,从而克服了传统时间序列建模方法的局限性。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Deep Learning Enables Early-Stage Prediction of Preterm Birth Using Vaginal Microbiota
Objective: Preterm birth (PTB) is one of the leading issues concerning infant health and is a problem that plagues all parts of the world. Vaginal microbial communities have recently garnered attention in the context of PTB, however, the vaginal microbiome varies greatly from individual to individual, and this variation is more pronounced in racially, ethnically and geographically diverse populations. Additionally, microbial communities have been reported to evolve during the duration of the pregnancy, and capturing such a signature may require higher, more complex modeling paradigms. In this study, we develop a neural controlled differential equations (CDEs) based framework for identifying early PTBs in racially diverse cohorts from irregularly sampled vaginal microbial abundance data. Methods: We obtained relative abundances of microbial species within vaginal microbiota using 16S rRNA sequences obtained from vaginal swabs at various stages of pregnancy. We employed a recently introduced deep learning paradigm known as ``Neural CDEs" to predict PTBs. This method, previously unexplored, analyzes irregularly sampled microbial abundance profiles in a time-series format. Results: Our framework is able to identify signatures in the temporally evolving vaginal microbiome during trimester~2 and can predict incidences of PTB (mean test set ROC-AUC = 0.81, accuracy = 0.75, f1 score = 0.71) significantly better than traditional ML classifiers, thus enabling effective early-stage PTB risk assessment. Conclusion and Significance: Our method is able to differentiate between term and preterm outcomes with a substantial accuracy, despite being trained using irregularly sampled microbial abundance profiles, thus overcoming the limitations of traditional time-series modeling methods.
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