Deep learning model for assessing survival benefits in hepatocellular carcinoma patients undergoing intra-arterial therapies based on proliferative subtype.
The proliferative hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC) subtype is associated with aggressive disease and poor prognosis, yet it remains challenging to identify non-invasively.
- 표본수 (n) 398
- p-value P < 0.001
- 95% CI 0.781-0.884
APA
Cao F, An C, et al. (2025). Deep learning model for assessing survival benefits in hepatocellular carcinoma patients undergoing intra-arterial therapies based on proliferative subtype.. NPJ digital medicine, 8(1), 692. https://doi.org/10.1038/s41746-025-02100-4
MLA
Cao F, et al.. "Deep learning model for assessing survival benefits in hepatocellular carcinoma patients undergoing intra-arterial therapies based on proliferative subtype.." NPJ digital medicine, vol. 8, no. 1, 2025, pp. 692.
PMID
41258471
Abstract
The proliferative hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC) subtype is associated with aggressive disease and poor prognosis, yet it remains challenging to identify non-invasively. This retrospective multicenter study developed a multitask deep learning system for detecting proliferative HCC and predicting survival after intra-arterial therapy (IAT). Contrast-enhanced CT scans from two cohorts (surgical resection, n = 398; unresectable HCC receiving transarterial chemoembolization or hepatic arterial infusion chemotherapy, n = 1749) were analyzed using an nnUNet-based segmentation pipeline for liver and tumor delineation. A novel Prototype Mamba Net (PMN) architecture was created to extract imaging features indicative of proliferative biology. The model achieved AUCs of 0.825 (95% CI: 0.781-0.884) and 0.792 (95% CI: 0.732-0.841) on training and testing sets, respectively, for detecting proliferative HCC. Prognostic nomograms combining radiomic and clinical variables outperformed traditional staging systems (time-dependent AUC: 0.83-0.87; integrated Brier score: 0.12 versus 0.18-0.23, all P < 0.001). Among low-risk patients, no significant difference in survival was observed. However, for high-risk patients, HAIC showed a significant survival benefit compared to TACE (training and testing, P < 0.001). This non-invasive deep learning method enables preoperative identification of proliferative HCC and supports personalized IAT treatment choices, potentially improving outcomes in unresectable HCC.