Multi-scale machine learning model predicts muscle and functional disease progression in FSHD.

Journal: BioRxiv : The Preprint Server For Biology
Published:
Abstract

Facioscapulohumeral muscular dystrophy (FSHD) is a genetic neuromuscular disorder characterized by progressive muscle degeneration with substantial variability in severity and progression patterns. FSHD is a highly heterogeneous disease; however, current clinical metrics used tracking disease progression lack sensitivity for personalized assessment, which greatly limits the design and execution of clinical trials. This study introduces a multi-scale machine learning framework leveraging whole-body magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) and clinical data to predict regional, muscle, joint, and functional progression in FSHD. The goal this work is to create a 'digital twin' of individual FSHD patients that can be leveraged in clinical trials. Using a combined dataset of over 100 patients from seven studies, MRI-derived metrics-including fat fraction, lean muscle volume, and fat spatial heterogeneity at baseline-were integrated with clinical and functional measures. A three-stage random forest model was developed to predict annualized changes in muscle composition and a functional outcome (timed up-and-go (TUG)). All model stages revealed strong predictive performance in separate holdout datasets. After training, the models predicted fat fraction change with a root mean square error (RMSE) of 2.16% and lean volume change with a RMSE of 8.1ml in a holdout testing dataset. Feature analysis revealed that metrics fat heterogeneity within muscle predicts muscle-level progression. The stage 3 model that combined functional muscle groups and predicted change in TUG with a RMSE of 0.6 seconds, in the holdout testing dataset. This study demonstrates the machine learning models incorporating individual muscle and performance data can effectively predict MRI disease progression and functional performance of complex tasks, addressing the heterogeneity and nonlinearity inherent in FSHD. Further studies incorporating larger longitudinal cohorts as well as comprehensive clinical and functional measures will allow for expanding and refining this model. As many neuromuscular diseases are characterized by varability and heterogeneity similar to FSHD, such approaches have broad applicability.

Authors
Silvia Blemker, Lara Riem, Olivia Ducharme, Megan Pinette, Kathryn Costanzo, Emma Weatherley, Jeff Statland, Stephen Tapscott, Leo Wang, Dennis Shaw, Doris Leung, Seth Friedman