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Comorbidity scoring with causal disease networks
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Publication Year
2019-09-01
Publisher
Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers Inc.
Citation
IEEE/ACM Transactions on Computational Biology and Bioinformatics, Vol.16, pp.1627-1634
Keyword
Causalitycomorbiditydisease networksemi-supervised learning
Mesh Keyword
CausalityCo morbiditiesManufacturing industriesSemi- supervised learningSymmetric matricesAlgorithmsCausalityComorbidityComputational BiologyDatabases, FactualEpidemiologyHumansModels, BiologicalRiskSupervised Machine Learning
All Science Classification Codes (ASJC)
BiotechnologyGeneticsApplied Mathematics
Abstract
In recent years, there has been numerous studies constructing a disease network with diverse sources of data. Many researchers attempted to extend the usage of the disease network by employing machine learning algorithms on various problems such as prediction of comorbidity. The relations between diseases can further be specified into causal relations. When causality is laid on the edges in the network, prediction for comorbid diseases can be more improved. However, not many machine learning algorithms have been developed to concern causality. In this study, we exploit a network based machine learning algorithm that generates comorbidity scores from a causal disease network. In order to find comorbid diseases, semi-supervised scoring for causal networks is proposed. It computes scores of entire nodes in the network when a specific node is labeled. Each score is calculated one at a time and affects to the others along causal edges. The algorithm iterates until it converges. We compared the scoring results of the causal disease network and those of simple association network. As a gold standard, we referenced the values of relative risk from prevalence database, HuDiNe. Scoring by the proposed method provides clearer distinguishability between the top-ranked diseases in the comorbidity list. This is a benefit because it allows the choosing of the most significant ones on an easier fashion. To present typical use of the resulting list, comorbid diseases of Huntington disease and pnuemonia are validated via PubMed literature, respectively.
Language
eng
URI
https://dspace.ajou.ac.kr/dev/handle/2018.oak/30128
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1109/tcbb.2018.2812886
Fulltext

Type
Article
Funding
The authors would like to gratefully acknowledge support from the National Research Foundation of Korea (NRF) grant funded by the Korea government (MSIP) (No. 2015R1D1A1A01057178), ICT R&D program of MSIP/IITP (No. 2017-0-00887) and the Ajou University research fund. J. H. Jhee and S. Bang are the joint first authors.
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