The Journal of Clinical Endocrinology and Metabolism Journal Article

Thyroid Cancer Polygenic Risk Score Improves Classification of Thyroid Nodules as Benign or Malignant

February 27, 2024
 

Nikita Pozdeyev, Manjiri Dighe, Martin Barrio, Christopher Raeburn, Harry Smith, Matthew Fisher, Sameer Chavan, Nicholas Rafaels, Jonathan A Shortt, Meng Lin, Michael G Leu, Toshimasa Clark, Carrie Marshall, Bryan R Haugen, Devika Subramanian, Kristy Crooks, Christopher Gignoux, Trevor Cohen
The Journal of Clinical Endocrinology & Metabolism, Volume 109, Issue 2, February 2024, Pages 402–412
https://doi.org/10.1210/clinem/dgad530

Abstract

Context

Thyroid nodule ultrasound-based risk stratification schemas rely on the presence of high-risk sonographic features. However, some malignant thyroid nodules have benign appearance on thyroid ultrasound. New methods for thyroid nodule risk assessment are needed.

Objective

We investigated polygenic risk score (PRS) accounting for inherited thyroid cancer risk combined with ultrasound-based analysis for improved thyroid nodule risk assessment.

Methods

The convolutional neural network classifier was trained on thyroid ultrasound still images and cine clips from 621 thyroid nodules. Phenome-wide association study (PheWAS) and PRS PheWAS were used to optimize PRS for distinguishing benign and malignant nodules. PRS was evaluated in 73 346 participants in the Colorado Center for Personalized Medicine Biobank.

Results

When the deep learning model output was combined with thyroid cancer PRS and genetic ancestry estimates, the area under the receiver operating characteristic curve (AUROC) of the benign vs malignant thyroid nodule classifier increased from 0.83 to 0.89 (DeLong, P value = .007). The combined deep learning and genetic classifier achieved a clinically relevant sensitivity of 0.95, 95% CI [0.88–0.99], specificity of 0.63 [0.55–0.70], and positive and negative predictive values of 0.47 [0.41–0.58] and 0.97 [0.92–0.99], respectively. AUROC improvement was consistent in European ancestry-stratified analysis (0.83 and 0.87 for deep learning and deep learning combined with PRS classifiers, respectively). Elevated PRS was associated with a greater risk of thyroid cancer structural disease recurrence (ordinal logistic regression, P value = .002).

Conclusion

Augmenting ultrasound-based risk assessment with PRS improves diagnostic accuracy.

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