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Establishment and evaluation of prediction model for multiple disease classification based on gut microbial data. (Bang et al 2019)

Murph

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Establishment and evaluation of prediction model for multiple disease classification based on gut microbial data.
Bang S1,2, Yoo D1, Kim SJ3, Jhang S1,2, Cho S2, Kim H4,5,6.
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Abstract
Diseases prediction has been performed by machine learning approaches with various biological data. One of the representative data is the gut microbial community, which interacts with the host's immune system. The abundance of a few microorganisms has been used as markers to predict diverse diseases.

In this study, we hypothesized that multi-classification using machine learning approach could distinguish the gut microbiome from following six diseases: multiple sclerosis, juvenile idiopathic arthritis, myalgic encephalomyelitis/chronic fatigue syndrome, acquired immune deficiency syndrome, stroke and colorectal cancer. We used the abundance of microorganisms at five taxonomy levels as features in 696 samples collected from different studies to establish the best prediction model.

We built classification models based on four multi-class classifiers and two feature selection methods including a forward selection and a backward elimination. As a result, we found that the performance of classification is improved as we use the lower taxonomy levels of features; the highest performance was observed at the genus level. Among four classifiers, LogitBoost-based prediction model outperformed other classifiers.

Also, we suggested the optimal feature subsets at the genus-level obtained by backward elimination. We believe the selected feature subsets could be used as markers to distinguish various diseases simultaneously. The finding in this study suggests the potential use of selected features for the diagnosis of several diseases.

PMID: 31308384 DOI: 10.1038/s41598-019-46249-x
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Murph

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This is quite cool. They use gut bugs and algorithms to classify people into various diseases. 96% accuracy in me/cfs; with only a 1 per cent false positive rate, albeit a 28% false negative rate.

They found that sometimes people with me/cfs were being classified as having colorectal cancer; they speculate fatigue and sarcopenia (muscle loss) might be in common between the two.