To develop and validate a DeepSurv nomogram based on radiomic features extracted from computed tomography images and clinicopathological factors, to predict the overall survival and guide individualized adjuvant chemotherapy in patients with non-small cell lung cancer (NSCLC).
This retrospective study involved 976 consecutive patients with NSCLC (training cohort, n=683; validation cohort, n=293). DeepSurv was constructed based on 1,227 radiomic features, and the risk score was calculated for each patient as the output. A clinical multivariate Cox regression model was built with clinicopathological factors to determine the independent risk factors. Finally, a DeepSurv nomogram was constructed by integrating the risk score and independent clinicopathological factors. The discrimination capability, calibration, and clinical usefulness of the nomogram performance were assessed using concordance index evaluation, the Greenwood-Nam-D’Agostino test, and decision curve analysis, respectively. The treatment strategy was analyzed using a Kaplan–Meier curve and log-rank test for the high- and low-risk groups.
The DeepSurv nomogram yielded a significantly better concordance index (training cohort, 0.821; validation cohort 0.768) with goodness-of-fit (
The DeepSurv nomogram, which is based on the risk score and independent risk factors, had good predictive performance for survival outcome. Further, it could be used to guide personalized adjuvant chemotherapy in patients with NSCLC.