End-to-end prognostication in pancreatic cancer by multimodal deep learning: a retrospective, multicenter study

M. Schuurmans, A. Saha, N. Alves, P. Vendittelli, D. Yakar, S. Sabroso-Lasa, N. Xue, N. Malats, H. Huisman, J. Hermans and G. Litjens

European Radiology 2025.

DOI PMID

Abstract

Objectives

Pancreatic cancer treatment plans involving surgery and/or chemotherapy are highly dependent on disease stage. However, current staging systems are ineffective and poorly correlated with survival outcomes. We investigate how artificial intelligence (AI) can enhance prognostic accuracy in pancreatic cancer by integrating multiple data sources.

Materials and methods

Patients with histopathology and/or radiology/follow-up confirmed pancreatic ductal adenocarcinoma (PDAC) from a Dutch center (2004-2023) were included in the development cohort. Two additional PDAC cohorts from a Dutch and Spanish center were used for external validation. Prognostic models including clinical variables, contrast-enhanced CT images, and a combination of both were developed to predict high-risk short-term survival. All models were trained using five-fold cross-validation and assessed by the area under the time-dependent receiver operating characteristic curve (AUC).

Results

The models were developed on 401 patients (203 females, 198 males, median survival (OS) = 347 days, IQR: 171-585), with 98 (24.4%) short-term survivors (OS < 230 days) and 303 (75.6%) long-term survivors. The external validation cohorts included 361 patients (165 females, 138 males, median OS = 404 days, IQR: 173-736), with 110 (30.5%) short-term survivors and 251 (69.5%) longer survivors. The best AUC for predicting short vs. long-term survival was achieved with the multi-modal model (AUC = 0.637 (95% CI: 0.500-0.774)) in the internal validation set. External validation showed AUCs of 0.571 (95% CI: 0.453-0.689) and 0.675 (95% CI: 0.593-0.757).

Conclusion

Multimodal AI can predict long vs. short-term survival in PDAC patients, showing potential as a prognostic tool in clinical decision-making.

Key Points

Question

Prognostic tools for pancreatic ductal adenocarcinoma (PDAC) remain limited, with TNM staging offering suboptimal accuracy in predicting patient survival outcomes.

Findings

The multimodal AI model demonstrated improved prognostic performance over TNM and unimodal models for predicting short- and long-term survival in PDAC patients.

Clinical relevance

Multimodal AI provides enhanced prognostic accuracy compared to current staging systems, potentially improving clinical decision-making and personalized management strategies for PDAC patients.

Graphical Abstract