Movatterモバイル変換


[0]ホーム

URL:


AU2001280581A1 - A process for discriminating between biological states based on hidden patterns from biological data - Google Patents

A process for discriminating between biological states based on hidden patterns from biological data

Info

Publication number
AU2001280581A1
AU2001280581A1AU2001280581AAU8058101AAU2001280581A1AU 2001280581 A1AU2001280581 A1AU 2001280581A1AU 2001280581 AAU2001280581 AAU 2001280581AAU 8058101 AAU8058101 AAU 8058101AAU 2001280581 A1AU2001280581 A1AU 2001280581A1
Authority
AU
Australia
Prior art keywords
data
biological
clusters
cluster
sample
Prior art date
Legal status (The legal status is an assumption and is not a legal conclusion. Google has not performed a legal analysis and makes no representation as to the accuracy of the status listed.)
Abandoned
Application number
AU2001280581A
Inventor
Ben A. Hitt
Peter J. Levine
Lance A. Liotta
Emanuel F. Petricoin Iii
Current Assignee (The listed assignees may be inaccurate. Google has not performed a legal analysis and makes no representation or warranty as to the accuracy of the list.)
Correlogic Systems Inc
US Department of Health and Human Services
Original Assignee
Correlogic Systems Inc
Priority date (The priority date is an assumption and is not a legal conclusion. Google has not performed a legal analysis and makes no representation as to the accuracy of the date listed.)
Filing date
Publication date
Application filed by Correlogic Systems IncfiledCriticalCorrelogic Systems Inc
Publication of AU2001280581A1publicationCriticalpatent/AU2001280581A1/en
Priority to AU2008201163ApriorityCriticalpatent/AU2008201163A1/en
Abandonedlegal-statusCriticalCurrent

Links

Classifications

Landscapes

Description

A Process for Discriminating between Biological States based on Hidden Patterns from Biological Data
This application claims benefit under 35 U.S.C. sec. 119(e)(1) of the priority of applications Serial No. 60/232,909, filed September 12, 2000, Serial No. 60/278,550, filed March 23, 2001, Serial No. 60/219,067, filed July 18, 2000, and U.S. Provisional Application titled "A Data Method Algorithm Reveals Disease with Protein Signal of Ovarian and Prostate Cancer in Serum," (Serial. No. to be assigned), filed May 8, 2001 which is hereby incorporated by reference in its entirety. I. Field of the Invention
The field of the invention concerns a process for determining a biological state through the discovery and analysis of hidden or non-obvious, discriminatory biological data patterns. The biological data can be from health data, clinical data, or from a biological sample, (e.g., a biological sample from a human, e.g., serum, blood, saliva, plasma, nipple aspirants, synovial fluids, cerebrospinal fluids, sweat, urine,' fecal matter, tears, bronchial lavage, swabbings, needle aspirantas, semen vaginal fluids, pre-ejaculate, etc.), etc. which is analyzed to determine the biological state of the donor. The biological state can be a pathologic diagnosis, toxicity state, efficacy of a drug, prognosis of a disease, etc.
Specifically, the invention concerns analytical methods that a) discover hidden discriminatory biological data patterns (e.g., patterns of protein expression in a serum sample that classify the biological state of an organ) that are subsets of the larger data stream, said discrimination implying the ability to distinguish between two or more biological states in a learning set of data and b) the application of the aforementioned patterns to classify unknown or test samples. More specifically, the invention concerns a method for analysis of a data stream, which is derived from a physical or chemical analysis of molecules (e.g., proteins, peptides, DNA, RNA, etc.) in the biological sample (e.g., a mass spectrum analysis of the sample). ' These patterns are defined as "hidden" because they are often buried within a larger highly complex data set and are not obvious or apparent to the eye or other current classification systems. The pattern itself can be defined as the combination of three or more values such that the position of the vectors in an n- dimensional space is discriminatory between biological states even when individual values may not be discriminatory. The discriminatory patterns of the invention are novel because they can be defined without any knowledge of the identity or relationship between the individual data points in the biological data or any knowledge of the identity or relationship between the molecules in the biological samples. One analytical method to discover such biological states comprises the application of two related heuristic algorithms, a learning algorithm and a diagnostic algorithm, wherein the parameters of the diagnostic algorithm are set by the application of the learning algorithm to a learning set of data such that two or more biological states may be distinguished. Such biological states may be the presence or absence of a disease, efficacy or non-efficacy of a drug, toxicity or non-toxicity of a drug, etc. Although the invention is generic, specific implementations for diagnosis of various cancers (including, but not limited to carcinomas, melanomas, lymphomas, sarcomas, blastomas, leukemias, myelomas, neural tumors, etc., and cancers of organs like the ovary, prostate, and breast), presence of a pathogen, and toxicity are disclosed. The preferred embodiment of the invention is the discovery and use of molecular patterns that reflect the current or future biological state of an organ or tissue. Another embodiment of the invention is the combination of data describing the molecular patterns of a biological state with other non-biological or clinical data (e.g., psychiatric questioning) to yield a classification describing the health of a patient. II. Background of the Invention
The detection of changes in biological states, particularly the early detection of diseases has been a central focus of the medical research and clinical community. The prior art includes examples of efforts to extract diagnostic information from the data streams formed by physical or chemical analysis of tissue samples. These techniques are generically termed "data-mining." The data streams that have been mined are typically of two forms: analysis of the levels of mRNA expression by hybridization to DNA oligonucleotide arrays ("DNA microarrays") and analysis of the levels of proteins present in a cell or in a serum sample, wherein the proteins are characterized either by molecular weight using mass spectroscopy or by a combination of molecular weight and charge using a 2-D gel technique.
Rajesh Parekh and colleagues have described protein based data- mining diagnosis of hepatocellular cancer using serum or plasma samples (WO 99/41612) , breast cancer using tissue samples (WO 00/55628) and rheumatoid arthritis using serum or plasma samples (WO 99/47925). In each publication, a two dimensional gel analysis is performed. The analysis consists of measuring the levels of individual proteins as determined by the 2-D gels and identifying those proteins that are elevated or depressed in the malignant as compared to the normal tissue. Liotta and Petricoin (WO 00/49410) provide additional examples of protein based diagnostic methods using both 2-D gels and mass spectroscopy. However, the analysis of Liotta and Petricoin is similar to Parekh in that it consists of a search for specific tumor markers. Efforts to identify tumor markers have also been performed using DNA microarrays. Loging, W.T., 2000, Genome Res. 10, 1393-02, describes efforts to identify tumor markers by DNA microarrays in glioblastoma multiforme. Heldenfalk, I., et al., 2001, New England J. Med. 344, 539, report efforts to identify tumor markers that distinguish the hereditary forms of breast cancer resulting from BRCA1 and BRCA2 mutations from each other and from common idiopathic breast cancer by data-mining of DNA microarray data.
Alon et al., 1999, PNAS 96, 6745-50, describe the use of DNA microarray techniques to identify clusters of genes that have coordinated levels of expression in comparisons of colonic tumor samples and normal colonic tissue. These studies did, in fact, identify genes that were relatively over or under expressed in the tumor compared to normal tissue. However, the clustering algorithm was not designed to be able to identify diagnostic patterns of gene expression other than a tumor marker typ pattern.
Data-mining efforts directed towards indicators other than tumor markers have been used for diagnosis. These efforts routinely employ pattern recognition methods to identify individual diagnostic markers or classify relationships between data sets. The use of pattern recognition methods to classify genes into categories based on correlated expression under a variety of different conditions was pioneered by Eisen, M., et al., 1998, PNAS 95, 14863-68; Brown, MPS, et al., 2000, PNAS 97, 262-67 and Alter, O., et al., 2000, PNAS 97, 10101-06. In general, these techniques use a vector space in which each vector corresponds to a gene or location on the DNA micro array. Each vector is composed of scalars that individually correspond to the relative levels of expression of the gene under a variety of different conditions. Thus, for example, Brown et al. analyzes vectors in a 79 dimension vector space where each dimension corresponds to a time point in a stage of the yeast life- cycle and each of 2,467 vectors correspond to a gene. The pattern recognition algorithms are used to identify clusters of genes whose expression is correlated with each other. Because the primary concern is the correlation of gene expression, the metric that is employed in the pattern recognition algorithms of Eisen et al. and related works is a Pearson coefficient or inner product type metric, not a Euclidean distance metric. Once clustering is established, the significance of each cluster is determined by noting any common, known properties of the genes of a cluster. The inference is made that the heretofore uncharacterized genes found in the same cluster may share one or more of these common properties. The pattern recognition techniques of Eisen et al. were applied by
Alizadeh and Staudt to the diagnosis of types of malignancy. Alizadeh and Staudt began by constructing vectors, each corresponding to a gene, having scalars that correspond to the relative level of expression of the gene under some differentiation condition, e.g., resting peripheral blood lymphocyte or mitogen stimulated T cells. The pattern recognition algorithm then clusters the genes according to the correlation of their expression and defines a pattern of expression characteristic of each differentiation state. Samples of diffuse large B-cell lymphomas (DLBCL) were then analyzed by hybridization of mRNA to the same DNA microarrays as used to determine the gene clusters. DLBCL were found to have at least two different gene expression patterns, each characteristic of a normal differentiation state. The prognosis of the DLBCL was found to correlate with the characteristic differentiation state. Thus, the diagnostic question posed and answered in Alizadeh and Staudt was not benign or malignant but rather of determining the type or subtype of malignancy by identifying the type of differentiated cell having a pattern of gene expression most similar to that of the malignancy. Alizadeh et al., 2000, Nature 403, 503-511. Similar techniques have been used to distinguish between acute myeloid leukemia and acute lymphocytic leukemia. Golub, T.R., et al., 1999, Science 286, 531-537.
Accordingly, it can be seen that data-mining methods based on the physical or chemical analyses having large numbers, i.e., greater than 1,000, of data points consist of two types: data-mining to identify individual markers such as genes or proteins having expression levels that are increased or suppressed in malignant cells of a defined type compared to normal cell; and data-mining wherein a pattern of known gene expression characteristic of a normal differentiated cell type is used to classify a known malignant cell according to the normal cell type it most closely resembles.
Thus, there is a need for methods that can determine biological states using biological data other than single markers (such as tumor markers), or gene expression clusters. Usually, the role that single markers play in the pathology of a disease must be known and established, quite often at great cost, prior to the analysis of a biological sample. Additionally, these markers are often localized in internal organs or tumors, and complex, invasive, localized biopsies must be performed to obtain biological samples containing such markers. Given the complexity of biological states such as a disease there is an exceptional need for the ability to diagnose biological states using complex data inherent to such biological states without prior extensive knowledge of the relationship of molecules present in such samples to each other.
Additionally, gene expression cluster analysis is limited in scope because such analysis incorporates an analysis of all expressed genes irrespective of whether the expression of such genes is causative or merely influenced by the causative action of those genes that are characteristic of the biological state. The clustering analysis does not incorporate solely those genes that are characteristic of the biological state of interest, but uses the entire range of data emanating from the assay, thus making it complex and cumbersome. Furthermore, gene expression analysis must involve nucleic acid extraction methods, making it complex, and time- consuming. Pattern recognition algorithms when applied are also rendered difficult because the correlation of gene expression that is employed is a complex Pearson coefficient or inner product type metric, and not a simple Euclidean distance metric. In contrast to the prior art, the current invention discovers optimal hidden molecular patterns as subsets within a larger complex data field, whereby the pattern itself is discriminatory between biological states. Thus, the current invention avoids all the aforementioned problems associated with the analytical methods disclosed in the prior art, and has the ability to discover heretofore unknown diagnostic patterns. Such hidden molecular patterns are present in data streams derived from health data, clinical data, or biological data. Biological data may be derived from simple biological fluids, such as serum, blood, saliva, plasma, nipple aspirants, synovial fluids, cerebrospinal fluids, sweat, urine, fecal matter, tears, bronchial lavage, swabbings, needle aspirantas, semen, vaginal fluids, pre-ejaculate, etc., making routine sampling easy, although the expression of such molecular patterns are characteristic of disease states of remote organs. No prior knowledge of specific tumor markers or the relationship of molecules present in the biological sample to each other is required or even desired. The current invention also discloses methods of data generation and analysis. Such methods of data analysis incorporate optimization algorithms in which the molecular patterns are recognized, and subjected to a fitness test in which the fitness pattern that best discriminates between biological states is chosen for the analysis of the biological samples. III. Summary of the Invention The invention comprises the use of pattern discovery methods and algorithms to detect subtle, if not totally hidden, patterns in the expression of certain molecules in biological samples that are potentially diagnostic in nature, or predictive of a biological state. In one embodiment of the invention such patterns of molecular expression are patterns of protein expression, particularly patterns of low molecular weight proteins (i. e. less than 20,000 Da). Such hidden patterns of protein expression may be obtained from only a sub-set of the total data-stream provided to the algorithm, several' subsets, or may be obtained from an analysis of the total data stream. The pattern can be defined as a vector of three or more values such that the position of the vectors in an n-dimensional space is discriminatory between biological states even when individual values may not be discriminatory. The molecules of interest may be any relevant biological material such as proteins (full, cleaved, or partially expressed), peptides, phospholipids, DNA, RNA, etc.
The discriminatory patterns that discriminate between biological states are often small subsets of data hidden in the larger data stream derived from physical or chemical analysis of the biological sample. Thus, in order to find such discriminatory patterns that distinguish between biological states, a means for finding an optimal set of features that make up the discriminatory pattern is required. The invention incorporates the process for finding this optimal set of features. A number of feature selection methods for discriminatory patterns may be used to practice the invention with varying degrees of classification success. These include, but are not limited to, statistical methods, stepwise regression methods, linear optimization methods, etc. However, statistical methods have some limitations in that they are often linear, at least in their simple, well-known forms such as multivariate linear regressions. Furthermore, statistical models tend not to be robust with respect to nonlinear data. The number of independent variables a statistical model can successfully employ is generally ten or less, with a practical preferred limit of five or six. The preferred embodiment uses a method that couples the genetic algorithm, an evolutionary computation method, directly to an adaptive pattern recognition algorithm to efficiently find the optimal feature set. See U.S. Patent Application titled "Heuristic Method of Classification," (filing date: June 19, 2001, claiming priority of application Serial No. 60/212,404, filed June 19, 2000).
One method disclosed by this invention consists of two related heuristic algorithms, a diagnostic algorithm and a learning algorithm. The diagnostic algorithm is generated by the application of the learning algorithm to a learning (or training) data set. The learning data set is a data set formed from biological samples for which the biological state of interest is provided for the pattern discovery operation. For instance, the learning data set may comprise data taken from the sera of individuals with an established biopsy diagnosis, e.g., a benign tumor and a malignant tumor. This would enable the learning algorithm to find a signature pattern of proteins that could discriminate normal from cancerous sera samples.
In one embodiment, the method according to the invention begins by subjecting a biological sample to a high throughput physical or chemical analysis to obtain a data stream. Such data streams include, but are not limited to, mass spectral data of proteins found in the sample or in .the intensity of mRNA hybridization to an array of different test polynucleotides. Generally, the data stream is characterized by a large number (10,000 or more) of intensities which are generated in a way that allow for the corresponding individual datum in data streams of different samples to be identified.
The first step of the diagnostic method is to calculate a vector, i.e., an ordered set of a small number (between 2 and 20100, more typically between 5 and 208) that is characteristic of the data stream. The transformation of the data steam into a vector is termed "abstraction." In the present embodiments, abstraction is performed by selection of a small number of specific intensities from the data stream. The second step of the diagnostic method is to determine in which, if any, data cluster the vector rests. Data clusters are mathematical constructs that are the multidimensional equivalents of non-overlapping "spheres" of fixed size in the vector space. Such data clusters are known as hyperspheres. The location and associated diagnosis of each data cluster is determined by the learning algorithm from the training data set. If the vector of the biological sample lies within a known cluster, the sample is given the diagnosis associated with that cluster. If the sample vector rests outside of any known cluster a diagnosis can be made that the sample does not meet that classification criteria or that it is of an unspecified atypia, i.e., an "atypical sample, NOS." For example, if a biological sample taken from a patient does not meet the classification of a malignant state for a specified cancer, it will be classified as non-malignant non-normal or of an unspecified atypia, "atypical sample, NOS." The learning algorithm utilizes a combination of known mathematical techniques and two pre-set parameters. The user pre-sets the number of dimensions of the vector space and the size of the data clusters. Typically, the vector space is a normalized vector space such that the variation of intensities in each dimension is constant. Thus, the size of the cluster can be expressed as a minimum percent similarity among the vectors resting within the cluster.
In one embodiment, the learning algorithm contains of two generic parts, which have been developed by others and are well known in the field - - a genetic algorithm (J.H. Holland, Adaptation in Natural and Artificial Systems, MIT Press 1992) and a self-organizing adaptive pattern recognition system (T. Kohonen, Self Organizing and Associative Memory, 8 Series in Information Sciences, Springer Verlag, 1984; Kohόnen, T, Self-organizing Maps, Springer Verlag, Heidelberg 1997 ). Genetic algorithms organize and analyze complex data sets as if they were information comprised of individual elements that can be manipulated through a computer driven natural selection process. In the present invention, the search for hidden or subtle patterns of molecular expression that are, in and of themselves "diagnostic" is qualitatively different from those generated by prior art implementations of learning algorithms or data-miriing techniques. Previous implementations of data-mining have identified specific molecular products that are indicative of a classification, e.g., proteins or transcripts that are elevated or depressed in pathological conditions. Thus, the level of the identified molecular products is termed per se diagnostic, because the level of the product is diagnostic without any further consideration of the level of any other molecular products in the sample, other than perhaps a normalizing molecular product that is used to normalize the level of the molecular products. One example of such per se diagnostic molecular products are tumor markers.
By contrast, in the data cluster analysis according to the invention, the diagnostic significance of the level of any particular marker, e.g., a protein or transcript is a function of the levels of the other elements that are used to calculate the sample vector. Such products are termed hereinafter as contextual diagnostic products. Thus, in prior implementations of data-mining techniques, the likeness between the biological sample of interest and the learning data set was based on the specified groupings of the biological sample compared to the specified diagnostic molecular products. However, in the invention, the learning algorithm discovers wholly new classification patterns without knowing any prior information about the identity or relationships of the data pattern, i.e., without prior input that a specified diagnostic molecular product is indicative of a particular classification.
The present invention is based, in part, on the unexpectedness or non- obvious discovery of finding hidden contextual diagnostic patterns to yield a classification, e.g., the diagnosis of malignancy in cancers such as carcinomas, melanomas, lymphomas, sarcomas, blastomas, leukemias, myelomas, and neural tumors. IV. Detailed Description of the Invention
The invention comprises a) creating a data stream representing the biological data (or combinations of data streams representing the biological data with clinical, health, or non-biological data) and abstraction of that data into characteristic vectors; b) the discovery of hidden diagnostic patterns of molecular expression (i.e. pattern discovery); and c) determining which biological state of interest such a pattern of molecular expression represents. The molecules of interest may comprise, but are not limited to, proteins, peptides, RNA, DNA, etc. The biological samples comprise, but are not limited to serum, blood, saliva, plasma, nipple aspirants, synovial fluids, cerebrospinal fluids, sweat, urine, fecal matter, tears, bronchial lavage, swabbings, needle aspirantas, semen, vaginal fluids, pre-ejaculate, etc.
The biological states of interest may be a pathologic diagnosis, toxicity state, efficacy of a drug, prognosis of a disease, stage of a disease, biological state of an organ, presence of a pathogen (e.g., a virus), toxicity of one or more drugs, etc. The invention may be used for the diagnosis of any disease in which changes in the patterns of expression of certain molecules like proteins allow it to be distinguished from a non-diseased state. Thus, any disease that has a genetic component in which the genetic abnormality is expressed, one in which the expression of drug toxicity is observed, or one in which the levels of molecules in the body are affected may be studied by the current invention. Such diseases include, but are not limited to, cancers (carcinomas, melanomas, lymphomas (both Hodgkin's and non-Hodgkin's type), sarcomas, blastomas, leukemias, myelomas, and neural tumors, such as glioblastoma, etc.), Alzheimer's disease, arthritis, glomeruulonephritis, auto-immune diseases, etc. Examples of carcinomas include, but are not limited to, carcinomas of the pancreas, kidney, liver and lung; gastrointestinal carcinomas.
The present invention is particularly valuable for the diagnosis of specific diseases for which early diagnosis is important, but is technically difficult because of the absence of symptoms, and for which the disease may be expected to produce differences that are detectable in the serum because of the metabolic activity of the pathological tissue. Thus, the early diagnosis of malignancies are a primary focus of the use of the invention.
The particular components of the invention are described below. A. Creation of the Data Stream
The data stream can be any reproducible physical or chemical analysis of the biological sample that results in a high throughput data stream. Preferably, the high throughput data stream is characterized by 1,000 or more measurements that can be quantified to at least 1 part per thousand (three significant figures) and more preferably one part in 10,000. There exist numerous methods for the generation of data streams. In one embodiment of the invention when the molecules of interest are proteins or peptides, "time of flight" mass spectra of proteins may be used to generate a data stream. More specifically, matrix assisted laser desorption ionization time of flight (MALDI-TOF) and surface, enhanced laser desorption ionization time of flight (SELDI-TOF) spectroscopy may be used when the molecules of interest are proteins or peptides. See generally WO 00/49410. In one embodiment, SELDI-TOF may be used to generate data streams for biological states representing toxicity, and detection of pathogens. In yet another embodiment, data streams may be generated using serially amplified gene expression (SAGE) for gene expression classification. In some circumstances, data streams may be generated using 2-D Gels such as two- dimensional polyacrylamide gel electrophoreses (2D-PAGE).
For clinical pathology, the preferred patient sample for analysis is serum. However, biopsy specimens that are relatively homogenous may also be used. For certain disease states, other fluids can be used, e.g. , synovial fluid may be used in the differential diagnosis of arthritis or urine in the differential diagnosis of glomerulonephritis.
The particular proteins that are included in either SELDI-TOF and MALDI-TOF analysis depend upon the surface or matrix that is employed. Lipophylic surfaces such as C-18 alkane surfaces are particularly convenient compared to anionic or cationic surfaces. However, those skilled in the art will appreciate that multiple spectra can be generated from the same sample using different surfaces. These spectra can be concatenated to yield "superspectra" which can be analyzed according to the invention. Likewise, data from two or more high throughput assay methods can also be joined which can be analyzed by the invention. Furthermore, biological data as described in this invention can be joined with clinical, health, or non-bib'logical data.
Whatever surface, matrix or combination of surfaces and matrixes are to be used, great care must be exercised to ensure that the surfaces are uniform from one biological sample to the next.
The data stream can also include measurements that are not inherently organized by a single ordered parameter such as molecular weight, but have an arbitrary order. Thus, DNA microarray data that simultaneously measures the expression levels of 2,000 or more genes can be used as a data stream when the tissue sample is a biopsy specimen, recognizing that the order of the individual genes in the data stream is arbitrary.
Those skilled in the art will appreciate that in keeping with the available commercial embodiments of the instruments, the description of the invention considers the generation of the data stream from a biological sample and the abstraction of the data stream based on the optimal logical chromosome to be two separate processes. However, it is apparent that only routine design choices would allow for the measuring instrument itself to perform the abstracting function. This in no way changes the contribution of the invention to such a diagnostic method and the claims are to be construed as allowing the abstraction and vector analysis portions of the claimed diagnostic method to be performed on different computing devices.
It should be noted that a single data stream from a patient sample can be analyzed for multiple diagnoses using the method of the invention. The additional cost of such multiple analysis would be trivial because the steps specific to each diagnosis are computational only.
B. The' Abstraction Process
"The first step in the diagnostic process of the invention is the transformation or abstraction of the data stream into a characteristic vector. The data may be conveniently normalized prior to abstraction by assigning the overall peak an arbitrary value of 1.0 and, thus, all other points fractional values. For example, in the embodiment in which the data stream is generated by TOF Mass spectra, the most simple abstraction of TOF mass spectrum consists of the selection of a small number of data points. Those skilled in the art will recognize that more complex functions of multiple points could be constructed, such as averages over intervals or more complex sums or differences between data points that are at predetermined distance from a selected prototype data point. Such functions of the intensity values of the data stream could also be used and are expected to function equivalently to the simple abstract illustrated in the working examples. Those skilled in the art will also appreciate that routine experimentation can determine whether abstraction by taking the instantaneous slope at arbitrary points could also function in the present invention. Accordingly, such routinely available variations of the illustrated working examples are within the scope of the invention. C. Pattern Discovery
Pattern discovery is achieved by numerous methods as discussed in the Summary above. However, in a preferred embodiment, the pattern discovery comprises a diagnostic algorithm and a learning algorithm. Thus, in order to practice this embodiment of the invention the routine practitioner must develop a diagnostic algorithm by employing a learning algorithm. To employ the learning algorithm, the routine practitioner-uses a training data set and must select two parameters, the number of dimensions and the data cluster size. See U.S. Patent Application titled "Heuristic Method of Classification," (filing date: June 19, 2001, claiming priority of application Serial No. 60/212,404, filed June 19, 2000). In one embodiment, the learning algorithm can be implemented by combining two different types of publicly available generic software, which have been developed by others and are well known in the field - a genetic algorithm (J.H. Holland, Adaptation in Natural and Artificial Systems, MIT Press 1992) that processes a set of logical chromosomes1 to identify an optimal logical chromosome that controls the abstraction of the data steam and a adaptive self-organizing pattern recognition system (see, T. Kohonen, Self Organizing and Associative Memory, 8 Series in Information Sciences, Springer Verlag, 1984; Kohonen, T, Self-organizing Maps, Springer Verlag, Heidelberg 1997 ), available from Group One Software, Greenbelt, MD, which identifies a set of data clusters based on any set of vectors generated by a logical chromosome. Specifically, the adaptive pattern recognition software maximizes the number of vectors that rest in homogeneous data clusters, i.e., clusters that contain vectors of the learning set having only one classification type. The genetic algorithm essentially determines the data points which are used to calculate the characteristic vector. However, in keeping with the nomenclature of the art, the list of the specific points to be selected is termed a logical chromosome. The logical chromosome contains as many "genes" as there are dimensions of the characteristic vector. Any set of the appropriate number of data points can be a logical chromosome, provided only that no gene of a logical chromosome is duplicated. The order of the genes has no significance to the invention.'■■:
Genetic algorithms can be used when two conditions are met. A particular solution to a problem must be able to be expressed by a set or string of fixed size of discrete elements, which elements can be numbers or characters, and the
1 The term logical chromosome is used in connection^ with genetic learning algorithms because the logical operations of the algorithm are analogous to reproduction, selection, recombination and mutation. There is, of course, no biological embodiment of a logical chromosome in DNA or otherwise. The genetic learning algorithms of the invention are purely computational devices, and should not be confused with schemes for biologically-based information processing. strings can be recombined to yield further solutions. One must also be able to calculate a numerical value of the relative merit of each solution, namely its fitness. Under these circumstances, the details of the genetic algorithm are unrelated to the problem whose solution is sought. Accordingly, for the present invention any generic genetic algorithm software may be employed. The algorithms PGAPack libraries, available from Argonne National Laboratory is suitable. The calculation of the fitness of any particular logical chromosome is discussed below.
In the illustrative examples, a training data set of about 100 sample data streams was used, each sample data stream containing about 15,000 data points. The genetic algorithms were initialized with about 1 ,500 randomly chosen logical chromosomes. As the algorithm progressed, the more fit logical chromosomes are duplicated and the less fit are terminated. There is recombination between logical chromosomes and mutation, which occurs by the random replacement of an element of a logical chromosome. It is not an essential feature of the invention that the initially selected collection of logical chromosome be random. Certain prescreening of the total set of data streams to identify those data points having the highest variability may be useful, although such techniques may also introduce an unwanted initialization bias. The best fitted pattern that survives this process is used to discriminate between biological states and determine the desired classification. D. The Pattern Recognition Process and Fitness Score Generation
The fitness score of each of the logical chromosomes that are generated by the genetic algorithm is calculated. The calculation of the fitness score requires an optimal set of data clusters be generated for the given logical chromosome. Data clusters are simply the volumes in the vector space in which the characteristic vectors of the training data set rest. The method of generating the optimal set of data clusters is not critical to the invention and will be considered below. However, whatever method is used to generate the data cluster map, the map is constrained by the following rules: (i) each data cluster should be located at the centroid of the data points that lie within the data cluster; (ii) no two data clusters may overlap; and (iii) the dimension of each cluster in the normalized vector space is fixed prior to the generation of the map.
As stated above, to employ the learning algorithm, the routine practitioner must use a learning data set and select two parameters, the number of dimensions and the data cluster size. Both parameters can be set using routine experimentation. Although there is no absolute or inherent upper limit on the number of dimensions in the vector, the learning algorithm itself inherently limits the number of dimensions in each implementation. If the number of dimensions is too low or the size of the cluster is too large, the learning algorithm fails to generate any logical chromosomes that correctly classify all samples into homogeneous clusters, and conversely if the number of dimensions can be too large. Under this circumstance, the learning algorithm generates many logical chromosomes that have the maximum possible fitness early in the learning process and, accordingly, there is only abortive selection. Similarly, when the size of the data clusters is too small, the number of clusters will be found to approach the number of samples in the training data set and, again, the routine practitioner will find that a large number of logical chromosomes will yield the maximum fitness.
Those skilled in the art understand that a training data set can nearly always be assigned into homogeneous data clusters. Thus, the value of the diagnostic algorithm generated by a learning algorithm must be tested by its ability to sort a set of data other than the training data set. When a learning algorithm generates a diagnostic algorithm that successfully assigns the training data set but only poorly assigns the test data set, the training data is said to be overfitted by the learning algorithm. Overfitting results when the number of dimensions is too large and/or the size of the data clusters is too small.
The method used to define the size of the data cluster is a part of the invention. The cluster size is defined by the maximum of the equivalent the Euclidean distance (root sum of the squares) between any two members of the data cluster. A data cluster size that corresponds to a requirement of 90% similarity is suitable for the invention when the data stream is generated by SELDI-TOF mass spectroscopy data. Mathematically, 90% similarity is defined by requiring that the distance between any two members of a cluster is less than 0.1 of the maximum distance between two points in a normalized vector space. For this calculation, the vector space is normalized so that the range of each scalar of the vectors within the training data set is between 0.0 and 1.0. Thus normalized, the maximal possible distance betweeri.iany two vectors in the vector space is then root N, where N is the number of dimensions. The Euclidean diameter of each cluster is then 0.1 x root (N). The specific normalization of the vector space is not a critical feature of the method. The foregoing method was selected for ease of calculation. Alternative normalization can be accomplished by scaling each dimension not to the range but so that each dimension has an equal variance. Those skilled in the art will further recognize that the data stream may be converted into logarithmic form if the distribution of values within the data stream is log normal and not normally distributed.
Once the optimal set of data clusters for a logical chromosome has been generated, the fitness score for that chromosome can be calculated. For the present invention, the fitness score of the .chromosome roughly corresponds to the number of vectors of the training data set that rest in clusters that are homogeneous, i.e., clusters that contain the characteristic vectors from samples having a single diagnosis. More precisely, the fitness score is calculated by assigning to each cluster a homogeneity score, which varies, for example, from 0.0 for homogeneous clusters to 0.5 for clusters that contain equal numbers of malignant and benign sample vectors. The fitness score of the chromosome is the average fitness score of the data clusters. Thus, a fitness score of 0.0 is the most fit. There is a bias towards logical chromosomes that generate more data clusters, in that when two logical chromosomes that have equal numbers of errors in assigning the data, the chromosome that generates the more 'clusters will have a lower average homogeneity score and thus a better fitness score.
A preferred technique for generating for generating data clusters is using the self-organizing map algorithm as developed by Kohonen. (Kohonen, T, Self-organizing maps, Springer Verlag, Heidelberg 1997). This type of technique is variously termed a "Lead Cluster Map" ("LCM") or an "Adaptive Feature Map" can be implemented by generic software that is publicly available. Suitable vendors and products include Model 1 from Group One Software (Greenbelt, MD) and Adaptive Fuzzy Feature Map (American Heuristics Corp.). The LCM has significant advantages in that it is a) it is a non-linear modeling method; b) the number of independent variables is virtually unlimited; and c) compared to other non-linear modeling techniques, the LCM has the advantage of being adaptive. It can detect novel patterns in the data stream and track rare patterns. This is particularly important in classification of biological states, viz, mutations to viruses.
E. Description and Verification of Specific Embodiments
1. Development of a Diagnostic for Prostatic Cancer Using the above-described learning algorithm, the current invention was employed to develop a diagnostic for prostatic cancer using SELDI-TOF mass spectra (MS) of 55 patient serum samples, 30 having biopsy diagnosed prostatic cancer and prostatic serum antigen (PSA) levels greater than 4.0 ng/ml and 25 normals having PSA levels below 1 ng/ml. The MS data was abstracted by selection of 7 molecular weight values (2092, 2367, 2582, 3080, 4819, 5439 and 18,220 Da). The specific molecular weights are not a critical parameter of the invention and may varying depending on the absorptive surface. A cluster map that assigned each vector in the training data 'set to a homogeneous data cluster was generated. The cluster map contained 34 clusters, 1 benign and 17 malignant.
The diagnostic algorithm was tested using 231 samples that were excluded from the training data set. Six sets of samples from patients with various clinical and pathological diagnoses were used. The clinical and pathological description and the algorithm results were as follows: 1) 24 patients with PSA >4 ng/ml and biopsy proven cancer, 22 map to diseased data clusters, 2 map to no cluster; 2) 6 normal, all map to healthy clusters; 3) 39 with benign hypertrophy (BPH) or prostatitis and PSA < 4 ng/ml, 7 map to diseased data clusters, none to healthy data clusters and 32 to no data cluster; 4) 139 with BPH or prostatitis and PSA >4 and <10 ng/ml, 42 map to diseased data clusters, 2 to healthy data clusters and 95 to no data cluster; 5) 19 with BPH or prostatitis and PSA > 10 ng/ml, 9 map to diseased data clusters none to healthy and 10 to no data cluster. A sixth set of data was developed by taking pre- and post-prostatectomy samples from patients having biopsy proven carcinoma and PSA > 10 ng/ml. As expected, each of the 7 pre- surgical samples was assigned to a diseased data set. However, none of the sample taken 6 weeks post surgery, at a time when the PSA levels had fallen to below 1 ng/ml, were not assignable to any data set. These results are summarized in Table 1. When evaluating the results of the foregoing test, it should be recalled that the rate of occult carcinoma in patients having PSA of 4-10 ng/ml and benign biopsy diagnosis is about 30%. Thus, the finding that between 18% and 47% of the patients with elevated PSA, but no tissue diagnosis of cancer, is consistent with a highly accurate assay that correctly predicts the presence of carcinoma. Of greater present interest is the fact that the diagnostic algorithm is able to classify a significant fraction of the samples in 3), 4) and 5) to a non- cancerous, non-normal category despite the fact that such category was not presented during training. Indeed, the fact that any samples from this group would necessarily include a substantial number with, occult carcinoma carriers argues that BPH or prostatitis samples should not be included in the training data set.
Table 1
aMale subjects entered in screening trial; entrance criteria: ?-50 years old, asymptomatic. Biopsv conducted if PSA ng.-ml or aposltive digital rectal exam. Includes δ patients with PSfc- 0 ng/ml and 18 patients with PSA 4-10 ng/ml.b30-35% occult cancer expectedc Patient-matched Serum taken at six-- week pcst-surgery follow-up
2. Development of a Diagnostic for Ovarian Cancer
The above described methods were employed to generate a diagnostic
algorithm for ovarian carcinoma again using SELDI-TOF MS analysis of patient
serum. A training set of 100 samples was used to construct a cluster set map. The
MS data was abstracted by selection of 5 molecular weights (531, 681, 903, 1108 and 2863 m/e). A cluster map consisting of 15 disease clusters and 11 healthy clusters was constructed. Of the 50 samples in the training data set Having proven ovarian
cancer, 40 were assigned to diseased data clusters, leaving 10 false negative; of the 50 samples from normals, 44 were assigned to healthy data clusters leaving 6 false positives.
It was observed that for each of the selected molecular weights, the range of values of the healthy and diseased data clusters overlapped. Indeed, for 4 of the 5 molecular weights, the range for the diseased encompassed the range for the healthy data clusters. Additionally, the diagnostic patterns being detected were not caused by tumor markers, but rather by contextual diagnostic products.
The diagnostic algorithm was tested using a further 100 samples, which were divided into three clinical, pathological groups. The groups and the algorithm results were as follows: 1) 50 samples from patients with no disease, 47 were assigned to healthy data clusters and 3 to disease data clusters; 2) 32 patients with ovarian carcinoma Stages II, III or IV, all of which were assigned to diseased data clusters; and 3) 18 patients with ovarian carcinoma stage I, all of which mapped to diseased data clusters. These results are summarized in Table 2.
Table 2
3. Sensitivity for Early Stage Disease
A set of randomly chosen sera (50 from the control cohort and 50 sera from the disease cohort) within the ovarian cancer study set of 200 specimens was selected for SELDI-TOF mass spectrometry analysis and subsequent training of the bioinformatics method. A pattern of mass intensities at 5 independent molecular weight regions of 534, 989, 2111, 2251, and 2465 Da discovered from a starting set of 15,0005 pattern permutations correctly segregated 98% (49/50) of the ovarian cancer samples and 94% of the controls (47/50) in the training set. The optimal proteomic pattern, challenged with 100 SELDI-TOF data streams from diagnosis-blinded cases was able to accurately predict the presence of ovarian cancer in all 50 cancer specimens contained within the 100 unknown test samples (50/50, 95% confidence interval 93% to 100%). This included the correct classification of 18/18 stage I cancers (95% confidence interval 82%) to 100%>) while maintaining specificity for the blinded cancer-free samples (47/50, 95%) confidence interval 84% to 99%, overall p< 10"10 by chi-squared test). These results support the hypothesis that low molecular weight proteomic patterns in sera reflect changes in the pathology of tissue within an organ at a distant site. Moreover, such patterns may be sensitive indicators of early pathological changes, since they correctly classified all 18 sera from organ-confined stage I ovarian cancer specimens.
'4 f Specificity, Prediction and Discrimination of the Presence of Prostate Cancer and Benign Prostate Hypertrophy Initially, the current invention was challenged to find a pattern of proteins that could discriminate the sera from men with biopsy-proven prostate cancer from sera derived from asymptomatic aged-matched males. The training set was comprised of 56 sera, 31 from asymptomatic men with biopsy-proven prostate cancer (PSA >4 ng/ml, avg. 14.5 ng/ml), and 25 age-matched men with no evidence of prostate cancer (PSA <1 ng/ml, avg. 0.3 ng/ml). The 56 sera were analyzed by SELDI-TOF. The pattern discovery analysis found a signature pattern of the combined normalized intensities of 7 protein peaks (out of 15,0007 possible permutations) at the specific molecular weights of 2092, 2367, 2582, 3080, 4819, 5439, and 18220 Da that could distinguish all 56 samples analyzed in the prostate sera training set.
After training, the optimal proteomic pattern was tested with 227 blinded sera samples. The blinded study set contained a) 24 sera from asymptomatic men who had subsequent biopsy-proven cancer, and whose PSA values were between 4-10 ng/ml at the time of collection, b) control sera from 6 age-matched males (PSA <1 ng/ml) and c) 197 sera from men with biopsy-proven benign prostatic hypertrophy or prostatitis (PSA values ranged from 0.4 ng/ml to 36 ng/ml).
Using the prostate signature pattern, the data-mining tool was able to accurately predict the presence of prostate cancer in the blinded test set (92%, 22/24, pO.OOOOOl compared to patients with BPH), including 17/18 containing PSA values of 4-10 ng/ml. Importantly 70% of the patients (137/197) with biopsy proven BPH were classified as belonging to a unique (non-normal, non-cancer) phenotype. Only 1% of the sera from the BPH-positive cohort was categorized as a normal phenotype. When sera from 6 healthy controls were compared to those of the 24 patients with biopsy proven cancer, 6/6 healthy, patients were classified correctly, compared to 22/24 patients with prostate cancer (pO.OOOOOl). In addition, a statistically significant trend emerged in the relationship between increasing PSA levels (normal, BPH with increasing PSA) and increasing classification of severity of disease (p=1.4 X 10"4). The optimized prostate signatures reverted from a cancerous to a non- cancerous (but not normal) phenotype in a blinded set of matched sera from patients who underwent curative prostate resection in 7 of 7 subjects (p=0.016; 95% confidence interval 59% to 100%).
5. Sample Source Preparation and Analysis a. Ovarian Cancer The anonymized ovarian screening serum study set was obtained from the Early Detection Research Network ("EDRN") National Ovarian Cancer Early Detection Program according to full Institutional Review Board ("IRB") oversight. This set contained sera from 200 asymptomatic women, 100 with ovarian cancer at the time of sample collection and 100 control women at risk for ovarian cancer as defined by family history or previous breast cancer diagnosis (Table 3). This group of unaffected women had been followed and was disease-free for at least five years. All sera were obtained prior to diagnosis and intervention. The disease cohort included histology confirmed papillary serous, endometrioid, clear cell, mucinous, adenocarcinoma, and mixed ovarian cancers of all stages. All women in the disease cohort underwent extensive surgical exploration and formal FIGO staging.
Table 3
b. Prostatic Cancer The anonymized prostate screening serum study set was obtained from a prostate cancer-screening clinic where samples were obtained under approved informed consent (277 samples) (Table 3). An additional 20 anonymized specimens were collected at the National Cancer Institute under IRB approved informed consent. The Chilean trial was initiated in 1996 and lasted for 5 years. The subject eligibility criteria required asymptomatic men over the age of 50 with no previous history of prostate cancer. All men provided a serum sample and then received a medical evaluation and a digital rectal examination. Subsequently, men with a serum PSA >4.0 ng/ml, or suspicious digital rectal examinations were subjected to a single core needle biopsy for pathologic diagnosis. The prostate adenocarcinomas represented were of a full spectrum of grades (I-III) and Gleason scores (4-9) . The 20 sera acquired at the NCI were taken from a) 7 men at the time of diagnosis and six weeks after prostatectomies for biopsy-proven organ confined prostate cancer and b) 6 normal healthy male volunteers, PSA< 1.0 ng/ml. All sera were obtained prior to medical examination, diagnosis, and treatment. All sera were collected, spun down, aliquoted and stored in liquid nitrogen until use. Received sera were thawed once, separated into iOmicroliter aliquots, and then refrozen in liquid nitrogen until SELDI-TOF analysis was performed.
5. Proteomic. analysis Sera were thawed and used once to generate protein mass signatures on the Protein Biology System 1 SELDI-TOF mass spectrometer (Ciphergen Biosystems, Freemont, CA). External mass calibration was accomplished using angiotensin I (amino acid sequence 1-10) and bovine cytochrome c (Ciphergen Biosystems, Freemont, CA) with respective masses of 1296.5Da and 12230.9Da. Protein profiles of all proteins that can bind to the C18 reverse-phase hydrophobic interaction surface within the 1000-20,000 Da mass range were generated. The organic acid matrix surface was α-cyano-4-hydroxy-cinnarnic acid (CHCA). This matrix is required to co- crystallize with the protein mixture for full protein ionization off of the selected bait. Sample preparation: One microliter of acetonitrile (Sigma- Aldrich
Co., St. Louis, MO) was added to the sample spots of the 8-feature C18 hydrophobic interaction protein chip (Ciphergen Biosystems, Inc., Freemont, CA). This chip will bind proteins through hydrophobic interactions that are dependent upon the intrinsic primary arnino acid sequences specific for every protein. The acetonitrile application was followed by the addition of 1 μl of serum. The sample was allowed to air dry on the chip. The chips were vigorously washed by vortexing in deionized water for 4 minutes and allowed to air dry. Lastly, 0.5μl of CHCA solution was added. After the
matrix solution dried, an additional 0.5μl of matrix was applied to each sample and allowed to air dry. The Cl 8 chip was chosen because it was found to consistently and reproducibly produce the greatest number of different protein and peptide signatures (data not shown). SELDI-TOF, like other time-of-flight spectrometric techniques, has its best sensitivity at the low molecular weight range (< 20,000 Da). Data were recorded and optimized for analysis with the SELDI Protein Biology System version 2.0 software (Ciphergen Biosystems, Inc., Palo Alto, CA). Raw SELDI data, not filtered or scaled in any way, were converted to ASCII data files for analysis by the data-mining tool.
6. Detection of Drug Toxicity
The method of the invention was tested on data streams obtained from biological samples from rats treated with doxorubicin that developed proven cardiotoxicity. Controls were treated with saline. The biological samples obtained from rats showing cardiotoxicity were classified correctly with 100%) selectivity and 100%) sensitivity and no false positives. See Table 4.
Table 4.
7. Detection of Drug Treatment
Rats were treated with doxorubicin and a cardioprotectant. Thus, some animals had toxicity while others did not. Table 8 shows that using the method of the invention all but one of the treated animals could be correctly identified, while only misclassifying 2 control animals. See Table 5.
Table 5.
8. Detection of Virus
Simian Foamy Virus was detected in cell lysates. Lysates from infected cells were correctly classified 80%) of the time (8/10) with no false positives. See Table 6. Table 6.
9. Use of a Windowing Technique for Ovarian Cancer
Initial reduction to practice was based on a simple trial and error selection of groups of 100 contiguous features in the proteomic data stream. An adaptive pattern recognition algorithm, the Lead Cluster Map, (LCM) was employed. Sampling of the data stream started at a different point in the data stream for each run. A run consisted of collection of 14-15 collections of 100 features. After a series of 25 runs, the best models accurately predicted the correct biological state 80% with a false positive rate of approximately 30 %. These results demonstrate the effectiveness of using proteomic patterns in the classification of biological states. Indeed, models with this level of accuracy would be well suited for batch screening of potentially therapeutic compounds. See Table 7.
Table 7
10. Detection of Breast Cancer
Nipple aspirants taken from breast cancer patients were analyzed using the process of the invention. The nipple aspirants were subjected to a mass spectral analysis and subjected to a pattern finding method. A sensitivity of nearly 92% was observed. See Table 8.
Table 8.
Sensitivity @ 0.67 91.67%
Selectivity @ 0.67 0.00%

Claims

In the Claims
1. A method of classifying a biological state from biological data by the detection of discriminatory patterns where the discriminatory pattern describes the biological state.
2. A method of classifying a biological state from biological data by the steps of: a. detecting a discriminatory pattern that is a subset of a larger set of data in a data stream, said discrimination defined by success in a learning set of data; b. applying said discriminatory pattern to classify known or test data samples; and c. using said discriminatory pattern to classify unknown data samples, wherein the discriminatory pattern is indicative of the biological state and is discriminatory even when individual data points are not.
3. A method of classifying a biological state in biological data by the detection of discriminatory patterns using a vector space having multiple predetermined diagnostic clusters defining a known biological state comprising the steps of : a. forming a normalized data stream that describes the biological data; b. abstracting the data stream to calculate a sample vector that characterizes the data stream; c. identifying the diagnostic cluster, if any, within which the sample vector rests; d. assigning to the biological data the diagnosis of the identified diagnostic cluster or, if no cluster is identified, assigning to the biological data the diagnosis of atypical sample, NOS; and e. using said discriminatory pattern to classify unknown data samples, wherein the discriminatory pattern describes the biological state and is discriminatory even when individual data points are not.
4. The method of claims 1, 2, or 3, wherein the discrimination is defined by success in a learning set of data, said learning set of data formed from biological data for which the biological state is known.
5. The method of claims 1 , 2, or 3, wherein the biological data is data describing the expression of molecules in a biological sample.
6. The method of claims 1 , 2, or 3, wherein the biological data is derived from clinical data.
7. The method of claims 1, 2, or 3, wherein the biological data is any combination of clinical data and data describing the expression of molecules in a biological sample.
8. The method of claims 1 , 2, or 3, wherein the biological data is any combination of non-biological data and data describing the expression of molecules in a biological sample.
9. The method of claim 5 wherein the molecules are selected from the group consisting of proteins, peptides, phospholipids, DNA, and RNA.
10. The method of claim 7 wherein the molecules are selected from the group consisting of proteins, peptides, phospholipids, DNA, and RNA.
11. The method of claim 8 wherein the molecules are selected from the group consisting of proteins, peptides, phospholipids, DNA, and RNA.
12. The method of claim 5, wherein the biological sample is selected from the group consisting of serum, blood, saliva, plasma, nipple aspirants, synovial fluids, cerebrospinal fluids, sweat, urine, fecal matter, tears, bronchial lavage, swabbings, needle aspirantas, semen, vaginal fluids, and pre-ejaculate.
13. The method of claim 7, wherein the biological sample is selected from the group consisting of any bodily fluid such as serum, blood, saliva, plasma, nipple aspirants, synovial fluids, cerebrospinal fluids, sweat, urine, fecal matter, tears, bronchial lavage, swabbings, needle aspirantas, semen, vaginal fluids, and pre-ejaculate.
14. The method of claim 8, wherein the biological sample is selected from the group consisting of any bodily fluid such as serum, blood, saliva, plasma, nipple aspirants, synovial fluids, cerebrospinal fluids, sweat, urine, fecal matter, tears, bronchial lavage, swabbings, needle aspirantas, semen, vaginal fluids, and pre-ejaculate.
15. The method of claim 5, wherein the biological sample is selected from the group consisting of tissue culture supematants, lyophilized tissue cultures, and viral cultures.
16. The method of claim 7, wherein the biological sample is selected from the group consisting of tissue culture supematants, lyophilized tissue cultures, and viral cultures.
17. The method of claim 8, wherein the biological sample is selected from the group consisting of tissue culture supematants, lyophilized tissue cultures, and viral cultures.
18. The method of claims 1, 2, or 3, wherein the biological state is a disease.
19. The method of claims 1 , 2, or 3 , wherein the biological state is a stage of a disease.
20. The method of claims 1 , 2, or 3 , wherein the biological state is the prognosis of a disease.
21. The method of claims 1, 2, or 3, wherein the biological state is the disease of an internal body organ.
22. The method of claims 1, 2, or 3, wherein the biological state is the stage of a disease of an internal body organ. •
23. The method of claims 1 , 2, or 3 , wherein the biological state is the health of an internal body organ.
24. The method of claims 1, 2, or 3, wherein the biological state is the toxicity of One or more chemicals.
25. The method of claims 1 , 2, or 3, wherein the biological state is the relative toxicity of one or more chemicals.
26. The method of claims 1, 2, or 3, wherein the biological state is the efficacy of a drug.
27. The method of claims 1, 2, or 3, wherein the biological state is the efficacy of one or more' drugs.
28. The method of claims 1 , 2, or 3, wherein the biological state is the responsiveness to a regimen of therapy.
29. The method of claims 1, 2, or 3, wherein the biological state is the state of perturbation of a body organ.
30. The method of claim 1, 2, or 3, wherein the biological state is the presence of one or more pathogens.
31. The method of claim 18, wherein the disease is one in which changes in the patterns of expression of inherent molecules in the diseased state are different from the non-diseased state.
32. The method of claim 18, wherein the disease is a cancer.
33. The method of claim 18 , wherein the disease is selected from the group consisting of auto-immune diseases, Alzheimer's disease and arthritis.
34. The method of claim 18, wherein the disease is glomerulonephritis.
35. The method of claim 18, wherein the disease is any infectious disease.
36. The method of claim 32, wherein the cancer is selected from the group consisting of carcinomas, melanomas, lymphomas, sarcomas, blastomas, leukemias, myelomas, and neural tumors.
37. The method of claim 37, wherein the carcinoma is a prostatic carcinoma.
38. The method of claim 36, wherein the carcinoma is ovarian carcinoma.
39. The method of claims 2 or 3, wherein the data stream is formed by any high throughput data generation method.
40. The method'of claims 2 or 3, wherein the data stream is a time of flight mass spectrum!;'
41. The method of claim 40, wherein the time of flight mass spectrum is generated by surface-enhanced laser desorption time-of-fiight mass spectroscopy.
42. The method of claim 40, wherein the time of flight mass spectrum is generated by matrix assisted laser desorption ionization time of flight.
43. The method of claims 1 , 2, or 3, further comprising using any pattern recognition method.
44. The method of claim 43, wherein the pattern recognition method further comprises a learning algorithm and a diagnostic algorithm.
45. The method of claims 1, 2, or 3, further comprising using a set of learning data streams to construct a diagnostic algorithm for a biological state of interest, wherein the diagnostic algorithm is characterized by having multiple diagnostic clusters of predetermined equal size in a vector space of a fixed number of dimensions, comprising the steps of: a. providing a set of learning data streams, each data stream describing a biological sample with a known biological state; b. selecting an initial set of random logical chromosomes that specify the location of a predetermine number of points of the data stream; c. calculating a vector for each chromosome and for each data stream by abstracting the data stream at locations specified by the chromosome; d. determining a fitness of each chromosome by finding the locations in the vector space of a multiplicity of non-overlapping data clusters of the predetermined, equal size that maximize the number of vectors that rest in a cluster having a uniform status, wherein the larger the number of such vectors the larger the fitness; e. optimizing the set of logical chromosomes by an iterative process comprising reiteration of steps (c) and (d), terminating logical chromosomes with low fitness, replicating logical chromosomes of high fitness, recombination and random modification of the chromosomes; f. terminating the iterative process and selecting a logical chromosome that allows for a preferred set of non-overlapping data clusters; and g. constructing a diagnostic algorithm that embodies the selected logical chromosome and homogeneous non-overlapping data clusters.
46. The method of claim 45, further comprising the step of testing a diagnostic algorithm embodying an optimized chromosome and a fitness-maximizing set of data clusters to determine how accurately the diagnostic algorithm diagnoses a test set of data streams each having a known diagnosis that is independent of the instructional data streams.
47. The method of claim 45 wherein the vector space contains between 5 and 10 dimensions.
48. A method of diagnosing the disease of an organ of an individual which comprises: a. analyzing a biological sample from the subject and calculating from the analysis a normalized vector, having at least 4 scalars and not more than' 20 scalars, that is characteristic of the sample; b. providing a vector space of between 4 and 20 dimensions occupied by a data cluster map comprising at least 6 equal-sized, non-overlapping data clusters, a multiplicity of which data clusters are associated with a disease diagnosis and a multiplicity of which data clusters are associated with a normal samples and no data cluster of said map is associated with more than one diagnosis; c. calculating in which, if any, of the data clusters of the data cluster map the characteristic vector rests; and d. assigning to the sample the disease diagnosis associated with the data cluster in which the characteristic vector rests or, if the vector rests in no cluster assigning a classification of non-normal.
49. A method of diagnosing the stage of a disease of an organ of an individual which comprises: a. analyzing a biological sample from the subject and calculating from the analysis a normalized vector, having at least 4 scalars and not more than 20 scalars, that is characteristic of the sample; b. providing a vector space of between 4 and 20 dimensions occupied by a data cluster map comprising at least 6 equal-sized, non-overlapping data clusters, a multiplicity of which data clusters are associated with a disease diagnosis and a multiplicity of which data clusters are associated with a normal samples and no data cluster of said map is associated with more than one diagnosis; c. calculating in which, if any, of the data clusters of the data cluster map the characteristic vector rests; and d. assigning to the sample the disease diagnosis associated with the data cluster in which the characteristic vector rests or, if the vector rests in no cluster assigning a classification of non-normal.
50. The method of claim 48, wherein the disease is a cancer.
51. The method of claim 49, wherein the disease is a cancer.
52. The method of claim 49, wherein the stage of the disease is a primary malignancy.
53. The method of claims 48 or 49, wherein the biological sample is selected from the group consisting of any bodily fluid such as serum, blood, saliva, plasma, nipple aspirants, synovial fluids, cerebrospinal fluids, sweat, urine, fecal matter, tears, bronchial lavage, swabbings, needle aspirantas, semen, vaginal fluids, and pre-ejaculate.
54. The method of claims 48 or 49 wherein the data cluster map defines a pattern, wherein at least one scalar of the vector is a contextual diagnostic product.
55. The method of claims 48 or 49, wherein the size of the data cluster is defined by a Euclidean metric.
56. A method of diagnosing a primary malignancy of an organ of a subject which comprises: a. analyzing a biological sample from the subject and calculating from the analysis a normalized vector, having at least 4 scalars, that is characteristic of the sample; b. providing a vector space of occupied by a data cluster map comprising at least 6 equal-sized, non-overlapping data clusters, a multiplicity of which data clusters are associated with a malignant diagnosis and a multiplicity of which data clusters are associated with a benign diagnosis and no data cluster of said map is associated with more than one diagnosis, wherein at least one scalar measures a product that is a contextual diagnostic product and wherein the size of the data cluster is defined by a Euclidean metric; c. calculating in which, if any, of the data clusters of the data cluster map the characteristic vector rests; and d. assigning to the sample the diagnosis associated with the data cluster in which the characteristic vector rests or if the vector rest in no data cluster assigning a diagnosis of non-normal, non-malignant.
57. The method of claim 56, wherein the biological sample is selected from the group consisting of any bodily fluid such as serum, blood, saliva, plasma, nipple aspirants, synovial fluids, cerebrospinal fluids, sweat, urine, fecal matter, tears, bronchial lavage, swabbings, needle aspirantas, semen, vaginal fluids, pre-ejaculate.
58. The method of claim 56, wherein the a multiplicity of scalars measure products that are contextual diagnostic products.
59. A computer software product that specifies computer executable code to execute a program comprising the following steps: a. inputting a normalized data stream that describes a biological sample with a sample identifier; b. inputting a set of diagnostic clusters, each cluster associated with a diagnosis of a known biological state; c. abstracting the data stream to calculate a sample vector that characterizes the data stream; d. identifying the diagnostic cluster, if any, within which the sample vector falls; e. assigning to the sample the diagnosis of the identified diagnostic cluster or, if no cluster is identified assigning to the sample the diagnosis of non-normal, non-malignant; and f . outputting the assigned diagnosis and the sample identifier.
60. A general purpose digital computer comprising a program to execute the executable code of claim 59.
61. A computer software product that specifies computer executable code to execute a program comprising the following steps: a. inputting a set of instructional data streams, each data stream describing a biological sample with a known biological state; b. inputting an operator specified number of points and an operator specified cluster size; c. selecting an initial set of random logical chromosomes that specify the location of the pre-specified number of points of the data stream; d. calculating a vector for each chromosome and for each data stream by abstracting the data stream at locations specified by the chromosome; e. determining a fitness of each chromosome by finding the locations in the vector space of a multiplicity of non-overlapping data clusters of the pre-specified size that maximize the number of vectors that rest in clusters having a uniform status, wherein the larger the number of such vectors the higher the fitness; f . optimizing the set of logical chromosomes by an iterative process comprising reiteration of steps (d) and (e), terminating logical chromosomes with low fitness, replicating logical chromosomes of high fitness, recombination and random modification of the chromosomes; g. terminating the iterative process; and h. outputting an optimized logical chromosome, and the locations of the data clusters that maximize the fitness of the optimized chromosome, so that a diagnostic algorithm that embodies the outputted logical chromosome and data clusters can be implemented.
62. A general purpose digital computer comprising a program to execute the executable code of claim 61.
63. A diagnostic model to determine a biological state of interest, wherein the diagnostic algorithm is characterized by having multiple diagnostic clusters of predetermined equal size in a vector space of a fixed number of dimensions.
64. The diagnostic model of claim 63, wherein the diagnostic clusters are produced by the following steps: a. providing a set of learning data streams, each data stream describing a biological sample with a known biological state; b. selecting an initial set of random logical chromosomes that specify the location of a predetermine number of points of the data stream; c. calculating a vector for each chromosome and for each data stream by abstracting the data stream at locations specified by the chromosome; d. determining a fitness of each chromosome by finding the locations in the vector space of a multiplicity of non-overlapping data clusters of the predetermined, equal size that maximize the number of vectors that rest in a cluster having a uniform status, wherein the larger the number of such vectors the larger the fitness; e. optimizing the set of logical chromosomes by an iterative process comprising reiteration of steps (c) and (d), terminating logical chromosomes with low fitness, replicating logical chromosomes of high fitness, recombination and random modification of the chromosomes; f. terminating the iterative process and selecting a logical chromosome that allows for a preferred set of non-overlapping data clusters.
65. The diagnostic clusters produced by the model of claim 64.
AU2001280581A2000-07-182001-07-18A process for discriminating between biological states based on hidden patterns from biological dataAbandonedAU2001280581A1 (en)

Priority Applications (1)

Application NumberPriority DateFiling DateTitle
AU2008201163AAU2008201163A1 (en)2000-07-182008-03-11A process for discriminating between biological states based on hidden patterns from biological data

Applications Claiming Priority (9)

Application NumberPriority DateFiling DateTitle
US21906700P2000-07-182000-07-18
US60/219,0672000-07-18
US23229900P2000-09-122000-09-12
US60/232,9092000-09-15
US27855001P2001-03-232001-03-23
US60/278,5502001-03-23
US28936201P2001-05-082001-05-08
US60/289,3622001-05-08
PCT/US2001/022447WO2002006829A2 (en)2000-07-182001-07-18A process for discriminating between biological states based on hidden patterns from biological data

Publications (1)

Publication NumberPublication Date
AU2001280581A1true AU2001280581A1 (en)2002-01-30

Family

ID=30119299

Family Applications (2)

Application NumberTitlePriority DateFiling Date
AU2001280581AAbandonedAU2001280581A1 (en)2000-07-182001-07-18A process for discriminating between biological states based on hidden patterns from biological data
AU2010246364AAbandonedAU2010246364A1 (en)2000-07-182010-11-23A process for discriminating between biological states based on hidden patterns from biological data

Family Applications After (1)

Application NumberTitlePriority DateFiling Date
AU2010246364AAbandonedAU2010246364A1 (en)2000-07-182010-11-23A process for discriminating between biological states based on hidden patterns from biological data

Country Status (15)

CountryLink
US (2)US6925389B2 (en)
EP (1)EP1386275A2 (en)
JP (2)JP5246984B2 (en)
KR (1)KR101054732B1 (en)
CN (1)CN1484806A (en)
AU (2)AU2001280581A1 (en)
BR (1)BR0112667A (en)
CA (1)CA2415775A1 (en)
EA (1)EA200300161A1 (en)
IL (1)IL153856A0 (en)
MX (1)MXPA03000506A (en)
NO (1)NO20030251L (en)
NZ (1)NZ524171A (en)
SG (1)SG144731A1 (en)
WO (1)WO2002006829A2 (en)

Families Citing this family (187)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication numberPriority datePublication dateAssigneeTitle
JP3442799B2 (en)1992-08-042003-09-02三菱重工業株式会社 High kneading mixing element
JP2003535594A (en)*2000-06-022003-12-02ラージ スケール プロテオミクス コーポレーション Protein markers for drugs and related toxicity
AU2001269877A1 (en)2000-06-192002-01-02Correlogic Systems, Inc.Heuristic method of classification
IL153856A0 (en)*2000-07-182003-07-31Correlogic Systems IncA process for discriminating between biological states based on hidden patterns from biological data
US6539102B1 (en)*2000-09-012003-03-25Large Scale ProteomicsReference database
US6980674B2 (en)2000-09-012005-12-27Large Scale Proteomics Corp.Reference database
CN1262337C (en)2000-11-162006-07-05赛弗根生物系统股份有限公司Method for analyzing mass spectra
US7981420B2 (en)2000-12-222011-07-19Max-Planck-Gesellschaft Zur Foederung Der Wissenschaften E.V.Therapeutic use of antibodies directed against repulsive guidance molecule (RGM)
US8041541B2 (en)*2001-05-242011-10-18Test Advantage, Inc.Methods and apparatus for data analysis
US20030009293A1 (en)*2001-01-092003-01-09Anderson Norman G.Reference database
JP2005500543A (en)*2001-08-132005-01-06ビヨンド ジェノミクス, インコーポレイテッド Methods and systems for profiling biological systems
US20050222972A1 (en)*2002-01-042005-10-06Hewlett-Packard Development Company, L.P.Computer implemented, fast, approximate clustering based on sampling
US20020193950A1 (en)*2002-02-252002-12-19Gavin Edward J.Method for analyzing mass spectra
AU2003214724B2 (en)*2002-03-152010-04-01Pacific Edge Biotechnology LimitedMedical applications of adaptive learning systems using gene expression data
WO2003093785A2 (en)*2002-05-022003-11-13Ciphergen Biosystems, Inc.Biochips with surfaces coated with polysaccharide based hydrogels
US7333895B2 (en)*2002-07-292008-02-19Correlogic Systems, Inc.Quality assurance for high-throughput bioassay methods
EP1394715A1 (en)*2002-08-022004-03-03Europroteome AGAn expert system for clinicial outcome prediction
EP1394549A1 (en)*2002-08-232004-03-03Bayer HealthCare AGBiomarkers for diagnosing Alzheimer's disease
AU2003291488A1 (en)*2002-11-122004-06-03Becton, Dickinson And CompanyDiagnosis of sepsis or sirs using biomarker profiles
MXPA05005073A (en)*2002-11-122005-11-17Becton Dickinson CoDiagnosis of sepsis or sirs using biomarker profiles.
WO2004044555A2 (en)*2002-11-122004-05-27Becton, Dickinson And CompanyDiagnosis of sepsis or sirs using biomarker profiles
US20040096896A1 (en)*2002-11-142004-05-20Cedars-Sinai Medical CenterPattern recognition of serum proteins for the diagnosis or treatment of physiologic conditions
JP4581994B2 (en)*2002-12-092010-11-17味の素株式会社 Biological state information processing apparatus, biological state information processing method, biological state information management system, program, and recording medium
WO2004061410A2 (en)2002-12-182004-07-22Ciphergen Biosystems, Inc.Serum biomarkers in lung cancer
EP1604184A4 (en)*2003-02-272010-10-27Stephen A LeskoStandardized evaluation of therapeutic efficacy based on cellular biomarkers
US6977370B1 (en)2003-04-072005-12-20Ciphergen Biosystems, Inc.Off-resonance mid-IR laser desorption ionization
US7341838B2 (en)2003-04-172008-03-11Biosite IncorporatedPolypeptides related to natriuretic peptides and methods of their identification and use
US20060177870A1 (en)*2003-04-282006-08-10Ciphergen Biosystems, IncImmunoassays
US20040236603A1 (en)*2003-05-222004-11-25Biospect, Inc.System of analyzing complex mixtures of biological and other fluids to identify biological state information
US7425700B2 (en)2003-05-222008-09-16Stults John TSystems and methods for discovery and analysis of markers
WO2004111201A2 (en)*2003-06-112004-12-23Research Foundation Of State University Of New YorkData classification using point-wise tests
WO2005003715A2 (en)*2003-07-022005-01-13Canon Kabushiki KaishaPromoted ionization for secondary ion mass spectrometry
US20050100967A1 (en)*2003-07-112005-05-12Science & Technology Corporation @ UnmDetection of endometrial pathology
EA200600346A1 (en)*2003-08-012006-08-25Коррелоджик Системз, Инк. MULTIPLE PROTOMIC PROPERTIES OF SERUM OBTAINED BY HIGH RESOLUTION SPECTROMETRY FOR OVARIAN CANCER
WO2005020125A2 (en)*2003-08-202005-03-03Bg Medicine, Inc.Methods and systems for profiling biological systems
US7634360B2 (en)*2003-09-232009-12-15Prediction Sciences, LLCellular fibronectin as a diagnostic marker in stroke and methods of use thereof
EP2369348A1 (en)2003-11-072011-09-28Ciphergen Biosystems, Inc.Biomarkers for Alzheimer's disease
BRPI0417231A (en)2003-12-052007-04-17Ciphergen Biosystem Inc method for qualifying Chagas disease status in a patient, kit, software product, purified biomolecule, and methods for qualifying Chagas disease status and for monitoring the course of progression of Chagas disease in a patient
WO2005060608A2 (en)*2003-12-112005-07-07Correlogic Systems, Inc.Method of diagnosing biological states through the use of a centralized, adaptive model, and remote sample processing
US7259258B2 (en)*2003-12-172007-08-21Illumina, Inc.Methods of attaching biological compounds to solid supports using triazine
US20050181398A1 (en)*2004-01-162005-08-18Fung Eric T.Specific detection of host response protein clusters
US7608458B2 (en)*2004-02-052009-10-27Medtronic, Inc.Identifying patients at risk for life threatening arrhythmias
WO2005078452A1 (en)*2004-02-052005-08-25Medtronic, Inc.Methods and apparatus for identifying patients at risk for life threatening arrhythmias
US20050209785A1 (en)*2004-02-272005-09-22Wells Martin DSystems and methods for disease diagnosis
US7035740B2 (en)*2004-03-242006-04-25Illumina, Inc.Artificial intelligence and global normalization methods for genotyping
WO2005112628A2 (en)*2004-04-152005-12-01The Curators Of The University Of MissouriSptrx-3 polypeptide and nucleic acid. uses thereof in methods and compositions for evaluation of male fertility
MXPA06012232A (en)*2004-04-202007-06-15Univ TexasUsing plasma proteomic pattern for diagnosis, classification, prediction of response to therapy and clinical behavior, stratification of therapy, and monitoring disease in hematologic malignancies.
EP1743031A4 (en)2004-04-262008-05-28Childrens Medical Center PLATELET BIOMARKERS USED IN THE DIAGNOSIS OF DISEASES
US20050244973A1 (en)*2004-04-292005-11-03Predicant Biosciences, Inc.Biological patterns for diagnosis and treatment of cancer
US8027791B2 (en)*2004-06-232011-09-27Medtronic, Inc.Self-improving classification system
US8335652B2 (en)*2004-06-232012-12-18Yougene Corp.Self-improving identification method
US20050287574A1 (en)*2004-06-232005-12-29Medtronic, Inc.Genetic diagnostic method for SCD risk stratification
US20060024746A1 (en)*2004-07-142006-02-02Artann Laboratories, Inc.Methods and devices for optical monitoring and rapid analysis of drying droplets
US20060115429A1 (en)*2004-11-302006-06-01Noubar AfeyanBiological systems analysis
WO2006060393A2 (en)*2004-11-302006-06-08Bg Medicine, Inc.Biological systems analysis
WO2006074360A2 (en)*2005-01-062006-07-13Eastern Virginia Medical SchoolApolipoprotein a-ii isoform as a biomarker for prostate cancer
US20060160156A1 (en)*2005-01-132006-07-20Suzanne KlimbergTears as a screening medium
US20060157647A1 (en)*2005-01-182006-07-20Becton, Dickinson And CompanyMultidimensional liquid chromatography/spectrometry
JP2008530555A (en)*2005-02-092008-08-07コレロジック システムズ,インコーポレイテッド Identification of bacteria and spores
US8315816B2 (en)*2005-02-162012-11-20Genetic Technologies LimitedMethods of genetic analysis involving the amplification of complementary duplicons
EP1862797A4 (en)*2005-03-162009-09-16Ajinomoto KkBiocondition evaluating device, biocondition evaluating method, biocondition evaluating system, biocondition evaluating program, evaluation function generating device, evaluation function generating method, evaluation function generating program, and recording medium
JP4843987B2 (en)*2005-04-052011-12-21ソニー株式会社 Information processing apparatus, information processing method, and program
CA2605143A1 (en)2005-04-152006-10-26Becton, Dickinson And CompanyDiagnosis of sepsis
US7499751B2 (en)*2005-04-282009-03-03Cardiac Pacemakers, Inc.Cardiac signal template generation using waveform clustering
US20080312514A1 (en)*2005-05-122008-12-18Mansfield Brian CSerum Patterns Predictive of Breast Cancer
EP1904852A2 (en)2005-06-242008-04-02Ciphergen Biosystems, Inc.Biomarkers for ovarian cancer: beta-2 microglobulin
US20070178526A1 (en)*2005-07-202007-08-02Kountakis Stilianos EUse of protein profiles in disease diagnosis and treatment
EP1910978A1 (en)*2005-07-212008-04-16Koninklijke Philips Electronics N.V.Method and apparatus for subset selection with preference maximization
US8921102B2 (en)*2005-07-292014-12-30Gpb Scientific, LlcDevices and methods for enrichment and alteration of circulating tumor cells and other particles
WO2007017770A1 (en)2005-08-052007-02-15Koninklijke Philips Electronics, N.V.Search space coverage with dynamic gene distribution
US9955438B2 (en)2005-09-272018-04-24Qualcomm IncorporatedMethod and apparatus for carrier allocation and management in multi-carrier communication systems
US20070072226A1 (en)*2005-09-272007-03-29Indiana University Research & Technology CorporationMining protein interaction networks
ES2542501T3 (en)2005-09-302015-08-06Abbvie Deutschland Gmbh & Co Kg Protein binding domains of the protein family of repulsive targeting molecules (RGM) and functional fragments thereof, as well as their use
US7599893B2 (en)*2005-10-132009-10-06Aureon Laboratories, Inc.Methods and systems for feature selection in machine learning based on feature contribution and model fitness
WO2007070809A2 (en)*2005-12-122007-06-21Mcgill UniversityBiomarkers for babesia
CA2640614A1 (en)*2006-01-272007-08-09Eastern Virginia Medical SchoolProteomic fingerprinting of human ivf-derived embryos: identification of biomarkers of developmental potential
EP2469279A1 (en)2006-03-112012-06-27The Board Of Trustees Of The Leland Stanford Junior UniversityCystatin C, lysozyme and beta-2-microglobulin as biomarker for peripheral artery disease
US7736905B2 (en)2006-03-312010-06-15Biodesix, Inc.Method and system for determining whether a drug will be effective on a patient with a disease
US7533070B2 (en)*2006-05-302009-05-12Honeywell International Inc.Automatic fault classification for model-based process monitoring
WO2007147018A1 (en)*2006-06-142007-12-21Cellpoint Diagnostics, Inc.Analysis of rare cell-enriched samples
EP2589668A1 (en)2006-06-142013-05-08Verinata Health, IncRare cell analysis using sample splitting and DNA tags
US8137912B2 (en)2006-06-142012-03-20The General Hospital CorporationMethods for the diagnosis of fetal abnormalities
WO2007147074A2 (en)*2006-06-142007-12-21Living Microsystems, Inc.Use of highly parallel snp genotyping for fetal diagnosis
US20080050739A1 (en)*2006-06-142008-02-28Roland StoughtonDiagnosis of fetal abnormalities using polymorphisms including short tandem repeats
US20080163824A1 (en)*2006-09-012008-07-10Innovative Dairy Products Pty Ltd, An Australian Company, Acn 098 382 784Whole genome based genetic evaluation and selection process
US20080201095A1 (en)*2007-02-122008-08-21Yip Ping FMethod for Calibrating an Analytical Instrument
US8221984B2 (en)2007-03-272012-07-17Vermillion, Inc.Biomarkers for ovarian cancer
EP2162552A4 (en)2007-05-112010-06-30Univ Johns Hopkins BIOMARKERS FOR MELANOMES
CA2691980C (en)2007-06-292022-05-10Correlogic Systems, Inc.Predictive markers for ovarian cancer
US20090049856A1 (en)*2007-08-202009-02-26Honeywell International Inc.Working fluid of a blend of 1,1,1,3,3-pentafluoropane, 1,1,1,2,3,3-hexafluoropropane, and 1,1,1,2-tetrafluoroethane and method and apparatus for using
WO2009058331A2 (en)2007-10-292009-05-07Vermilllion, Inc.Biomarkers for the detection of early stage ovarian cancer
US20110143956A1 (en)*2007-11-142011-06-16Medtronic, Inc.Diagnostic Kits and Methods for SCD or SCA Therapy Selection
WO2009064970A1 (en)*2007-11-142009-05-22Medtronic, Inc.Genetic markers for scd or sca therapy selection
ES2545203T3 (en)2008-02-192015-09-09Becton Dickinson And Company Systems and methods to identify a culture as positive in microorganisms with high reliability
US8962803B2 (en)2008-02-292015-02-24AbbVie Deutschland GmbH & Co. KGAntibodies against the RGM A protein and uses thereof
US8669113B2 (en)2008-04-032014-03-11Becton, Dickinson And CompanyAdvanced detection of sepsis
US7776522B2 (en)*2008-04-242010-08-17Becton, Dickinson And CompanyMethods for diagnosing oncogenic human papillomavirus (HPV)
WO2010033578A2 (en)2008-09-202010-03-25The Board Of Trustees Of The Leland Stanford Junior UniversityNoninvasive diagnosis of fetal aneuploidy by sequencing
US9186128B2 (en)2008-10-012015-11-17Covidien LpNeedle biopsy device
US11298113B2 (en)2008-10-012022-04-12Covidien LpDevice for needle biopsy with integrated needle protection
US8968210B2 (en)2008-10-012015-03-03Covidien LLPDevice for needle biopsy with integrated needle protection
US9782565B2 (en)2008-10-012017-10-10Covidien LpEndoscopic ultrasound-guided biliary access system
US9332973B2 (en)2008-10-012016-05-10Covidien LpNeedle biopsy device with exchangeable needle and integrated needle protection
US8543625B2 (en)*2008-10-162013-09-24Intelliscience CorporationMethods and systems for analysis of multi-sample, two-dimensional data
GB2464677A (en)*2008-10-202010-04-28Univ Nottingham TrentA method of analysing data by using an artificial neural network to identify relationships between the data and one or more conditions.
US20110251099A1 (en)2008-12-302011-10-13Sudha VisvanathanSERUM MARKERS PREDICTING CLINICAL RESPONSE TO ANTI-TNFa ANTIBODIES IN PATIENTS WITH ANKYLOSING SPONDYLITIS
US20100191790A1 (en)*2009-01-292010-07-29Agilent Technologies, Inc.System and method for correlation scoring of signals
US20100317006A1 (en)*2009-05-122010-12-16Medtronic, Inc.Sca risk stratification by predicting patient response to anti-arrhythmics
CA2774618C (en)2009-09-232020-10-27Celmatix, Inc.Methods and devices for assessing infertility and/or egg quality
US20110105856A1 (en)*2009-10-292011-05-05Robyn Aylor HainesDiagnostic testing
DK2510001T3 (en)2009-12-082016-02-29Abbvie Deutschland MONOCLONAL ANTIBODIES AGAINST RGM A PROTEIN USED TO TREAT DEGENERATION OF THE RETINAL NERVE FIBER LAYER
US8187979B2 (en)*2009-12-232012-05-29Varian Semiconductor Equipment Associates, Inc.Workpiece patterning with plasma sheath modulation
AU2011219069C1 (en)*2010-02-242014-07-17Biodesix, Inc.Cancer patient selection for administration of therapeutic agents using mass spectral analysis
JP5786020B2 (en)2010-04-162015-09-30アボットジャパン株式会社 Methods and reagents for diagnosing rheumatoid arthritis
JP6071886B2 (en)2010-10-142017-02-01ザ・ジョンズ・ホプキンス・ユニバーシティ Brain injury biomarkers
CN103229179B (en)*2010-12-082016-08-24霍夫曼-拉罗奇有限公司 Systems and methods for automatically revealing patterns in biomonitoring data
EP2678682A4 (en)2011-02-242014-10-01Vermillion IncBiomarker panels, diagnostic methods and test kits for ovarian cancer
AU2012275556B2 (en)2011-06-272016-02-04Eisai R&D Management Co., Ltd.MicroRNA biomarkers indicative of Alzheimer's Disease
US20130073221A1 (en)*2011-09-162013-03-21Daniel AttingerSystems and methods for identification of fluid and substrate composition or physico-chemical properties
JP2015527870A (en)2011-10-032015-09-24セルマティックス, インコーポレイテッド Method and device for assessing the risk of presumed births developing a condition
CA2855840C (en)2011-12-142023-08-29AbbVie Deutschland GmbH & Co. KGComposition and method for the diagnosis and treatment of iron-related disorders
WO2013090633A2 (en)2011-12-142013-06-20AbbVie Deutschland GmbH & Co. KGComposition and method for the diagnosis and treatment of iron-related disorders
MX352772B (en)2012-01-272017-12-07Abbvie DeutschlandComposition and method for diagnosis and treatment of diseases associated with neurite degeneration.
CA2866220A1 (en)2012-03-132013-09-19Abbvie Inc.Method for selecting or identifying a subject for v1b antagonist therapy
WO2013166217A2 (en)2012-05-012013-11-07Synapdx CorporationSystems and methods for normalizing gene expression profiles of biological samples having a mixed cell population
EP2844773B1 (en)2012-05-042017-08-16Boreal Genomics Corp.Biomarker analysis using scodaphoresis
MX361457B (en)2012-05-112018-12-06Reset Therapeutics IncCarbazole-containing sulfonamides as cryptochrome modulators.
US10288626B2 (en)2012-09-142019-05-14University Of Kentucky Research FoundationSecreted tumor-associated cytochrome as a blood-based biomarker for cancer
US9177098B2 (en)2012-10-172015-11-03Celmatix Inc.Systems and methods for determining the probability of a pregnancy at a selected point in time
US10162800B2 (en)2012-10-172018-12-25Celmatix Inc.Systems and methods for determining the probability of a pregnancy at a selected point in time
AU2013337353B2 (en)2012-11-022019-04-04The Johns Hopkins UniversityDNA methylation biomarkers of post-partum depression risk
US9087298B2 (en)2012-12-052015-07-21International Business Machines CorporationInference of anomalous behavior of members of cohorts and associate actors related to the anomalous behavior based on divergent movement from the cohort context centroid
US9836577B2 (en)2012-12-142017-12-05Celmatix, Inc.Methods and devices for assessing risk of female infertility
CA3210220A1 (en)2013-05-102014-11-13Johns Hopkins UniversityCompositions for ovarian cancer assessment having improved specificity
EP3014505A4 (en)*2013-06-282017-03-08Nantomics, LLCPathway analysis for identification of diagnostic tests
EP3019630B1 (en)2013-07-112018-09-19The Johns Hopkins UniversityA dna methylation and genotype specific biomarker of suicide attempt and/or suicide ideation
JP6611710B2 (en)2013-07-172019-11-27ザ・ジョンズ・ホプキンス・ユニバーシティ Multiprotein biomarker assay for detection and outcome of brain injury
US9898575B2 (en)2013-08-212018-02-20Seven Bridges Genomics Inc.Methods and systems for aligning sequences
US9116866B2 (en)2013-08-212015-08-25Seven Bridges Genomics Inc.Methods and systems for detecting sequence variants
CA2925335C (en)2013-09-302023-03-28Seven Bridges Genomics Inc.Methods and systems for detecting sequence variants
US9753131B2 (en)*2013-10-092017-09-05Massachusetts Institute Of TechnologyMotion tracking via body radio reflections
KR101473705B1 (en)*2013-10-112014-12-18삼성에스디에스 주식회사System and method for analyzing biological sample
JP2016533182A (en)2013-10-182016-10-27セブン ブリッジズ ジェノミクス インコーポレイテッド Methods and systems for identifying disease-induced mutations
US10832797B2 (en)2013-10-182020-11-10Seven Bridges Genomics Inc.Method and system for quantifying sequence alignment
US10078724B2 (en)2013-10-182018-09-18Seven Bridges Genomics Inc.Methods and systems for genotyping genetic samples
US11049587B2 (en)2013-10-182021-06-29Seven Bridges Genomics Inc.Methods and systems for aligning sequences in the presence of repeating elements
US9063914B2 (en)2013-10-212015-06-23Seven Bridges Genomics Inc.Systems and methods for transcriptome analysis
US10867693B2 (en)2014-01-102020-12-15Seven Bridges Genomics Inc.Systems and methods for use of known alleles in read mapping
US10619210B2 (en)2014-02-072020-04-14The Johns Hopkins UniversityPredicting response to epigenetic drug therapy
US9817944B2 (en)2014-02-112017-11-14Seven Bridges Genomics Inc.Systems and methods for analyzing sequence data
TWI690521B (en)2014-04-072020-04-11美商同步製藥公司Carbazole-containing amides, carbamates, and ureas as cryptochrome modulators
KR20150137283A (en)*2014-05-292015-12-09사회복지법인 삼성생명공익재단System and method for analyzing biological sample
AU2015289464A1 (en)2014-07-172017-02-02Celmatix Inc.Methods and systems for assessing infertility and related pathologies
US10222386B2 (en)2014-09-192019-03-05The Johns Hopkins UniversityBiomarkers of congnitive dysfunction
WO2016060910A1 (en)2014-10-142016-04-21Seven Bridges Genomics Inc.Systems and methods for smart tools in sequence pipelines
GB2533098B (en)*2014-12-092016-12-14IbmAutomated management of confidential data in cloud environments
EP3259594A4 (en)2015-02-202018-12-26The Johns Hopkins UniversityBiomarkers of myocardial injury
US10192026B2 (en)2015-03-052019-01-29Seven Bridges Genomics Inc.Systems and methods for genomic pattern analysis
US10275567B2 (en)2015-05-222019-04-30Seven Bridges Genomics Inc.Systems and methods for haplotyping
US10793895B2 (en)2015-08-242020-10-06Seven Bridges Genomics Inc.Systems and methods for epigenetic analysis
US10724110B2 (en)2015-09-012020-07-28Seven Bridges Genomics Inc.Systems and methods for analyzing viral nucleic acids
US10584380B2 (en)2015-09-012020-03-10Seven Bridges Genomics Inc.Systems and methods for mitochondrial analysis
US11347704B2 (en)2015-10-162022-05-31Seven Bridges Genomics Inc.Biological graph or sequence serialization
US20170199960A1 (en)2016-01-072017-07-13Seven Bridges Genomics Inc.Systems and methods for adaptive local alignment for graph genomes
US10364468B2 (en)2016-01-132019-07-30Seven Bridges Genomics Inc.Systems and methods for analyzing circulating tumor DNA
US10460829B2 (en)2016-01-262019-10-29Seven Bridges Genomics Inc.Systems and methods for encoding genetic variation for a population
US10262102B2 (en)2016-02-242019-04-16Seven Bridges Genomics Inc.Systems and methods for genotyping with graph reference
US11250931B2 (en)2016-09-012022-02-15Seven Bridges Genomics Inc.Systems and methods for detecting recombination
US11266344B2 (en)2016-09-212022-03-08Samsung Electronics Co., Ltd.Method for measuring skin condition and electronic device therefor
EP3522893B1 (en)2016-10-042024-12-04University Of Maryland, BaltimoreMethods of treating sepsis using anti-sepsis lipid a (asla) based therapeutics
CN110678751A (en)2017-03-092020-01-10克利拉生物技术有限公司Biomarkers for cellular senescence
WO2018227202A1 (en)*2017-06-092018-12-13Bellwether Bio, Inc.Determination of cancer type in a subject by probabilistic modeling of circulating nucleic acid fragment endpoints
BR112020010430A2 (en)2017-12-292020-11-24Abbott Laboratories biomarkers and innovative methods to diagnose and evaluate traumatic brain injury
US12174193B2 (en)2018-01-152024-12-24Epiaxis Therapeutics Pty LtdAgents and methods for predicting response to therapy
JP6852004B2 (en)*2018-03-072021-03-31株式会社東芝 Data analysis system, data analysis method, and program
US12235273B2 (en)2018-05-042025-02-25Abbott LaboratoriesHBV diagnostic, prognostic, and therapeutic methods and products
US20200097879A1 (en)*2018-09-252020-03-26Oracle International CorporationTechniques for automatic opportunity evaluation and action recommendation engine
US11467803B2 (en)2019-09-132022-10-11Oracle International CorporationIdentifying regulator and driver signals in data systems
KR102206905B1 (en)2018-12-282021-01-25(주)아이쿱Method for inferring life pattern and changed factor based on blood test result
AU2020227319A1 (en)2019-02-272021-09-09Epiaxis Therapeutics Pty LtdMethods and agents for assessing T-cell function and predicting response to therapy
AU2020326698A1 (en)2019-08-052022-02-24Seer, Inc.Systems and methods for sample preparation, data generation, and protein corona analysis
BR112022022986A2 (en)2020-05-132023-01-17Disc Medicine Inc ANTI-HEMOJUVELIN (HJV) ANTIBODIES TO TREAT MYELOFIBROSIS
WO2022084993A1 (en)*2020-10-192022-04-28B. G. Negev Technologies And Applications Ltd., At Ben-Gurion UniversityRapid and direct identification and determination of urine bacterial susceptibility to antibiotics
US20220284269A1 (en)*2021-03-032022-09-08Lanzatech, Inc.System for control and analysis of gas fermentation processes
WO2023122723A1 (en)2021-12-232023-06-29The Broad Institute, Inc.Panels and methods for diagnosing and treating lung cancer
WO2024044578A1 (en)2022-08-222024-02-29University Of VirginiaDna methylation biomarkers of premenstrual dysphoric disorder and perimenopausal depression
WO2025003416A1 (en)2023-06-282025-01-02EndodiagNon-invasive diagnostic biomarker-based test of endometriosis

Family Cites Families (66)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication numberPriority datePublication dateAssigneeTitle
US3935562A (en)*1974-02-221976-01-27Stephens Richard GPattern recognition method and apparatus
US4075475A (en)*1976-05-031978-02-21Chemetron CorporationProgrammed thermal degradation-mass spectrometry analysis method facilitating identification of a biological specimen
US4697242A (en)*1984-06-111987-09-29Holland John HAdaptive computing system capable of learning and discovery
US4646355A (en)*1985-03-151987-02-24Tektronix, Inc.Method and apparatus for input picture enhancement by removal of undersired dots and voids
GB2187035A (en)*1986-01-271987-08-26Eric James SjobergPyrolysis mass spectrometer disease diagnosis aid
US4881178A (en)*1987-05-071989-11-14The Regents Of The University Of MichiganMethod of controlling a classifier system
US5697369A (en)*1988-12-221997-12-16Biofield Corp.Method and apparatus for disease, injury and bodily condition screening or sensing
AU7563191A (en)*1990-03-281991-10-21John R. KozaNon-linear genetic algorithms for solving problems by finding a fit composition of functions
US5210412A (en)*1991-01-311993-05-11Wayne State UniversityMethod for analyzing an organic sample
US5784162A (en)*1993-08-181998-07-21Applied Spectral Imaging Ltd.Spectral bio-imaging methods for biological research, medical diagnostics and therapy
WO1993005478A1 (en)*1991-08-281993-03-18Becton, Dickinson & CompanyGravitational attractor engine for adaptively autoclustering n-dimensional data streams
US5632957A (en)*1993-11-011997-05-27NanogenMolecular biological diagnostic systems including electrodes
EP1341126A3 (en)*1992-09-012004-02-04Apple Computer, Inc.Image compression using a shared codebook
US5790761A (en)*1992-12-111998-08-04Heseltine; Gary L.Method and apparatus for the diagnosis of colorectal cancer
CA2163426C (en)*1993-05-282005-11-01T. William HutchensMethod and apparatus for desorption and ionization of analytes
US5995645A (en)*1993-08-181999-11-30Applied Spectral Imaging Ltd.Method of cancer cell detection
US5352613A (en)*1993-10-071994-10-04Tafas Triantafillos PCytological screening method
US6025128A (en)*1994-09-292000-02-15The University Of TulsaPrediction of prostate cancer progression by analysis of selected predictive parameters
AU1837495A (en)*1994-10-131996-05-06Horus Therapeutics, Inc.Computer assisted methods for diagnosing diseases
US5848177A (en)*1994-12-291998-12-08Board Of Trustees Operating Michigan State UniversityMethod and system for detection of biological materials using fractal dimensions
GB2301897B (en)*1995-06-081999-05-26Univ Wales Aberystwyth TheComposition analysis
KR100197580B1 (en)*1995-09-131999-06-15이민화A living body monitoring system making use of wireless netwokk
US5716825A (en)*1995-11-011998-02-10Hewlett Packard CompanyIntegrated nucleic acid analysis system for MALDI-TOF MS
US5687716A (en)*1995-11-151997-11-18Kaufmann; PeterSelective differentiating diagnostic process based on broad data bases
DE19543020A1 (en)*1995-11-181997-05-22Boehringer Mannheim Gmbh Method and device for determining analytical data on the interior of a scattering matrix
SE9602545L (en)*1996-06-251997-12-26Michael Mecklenburg Method of discriminating complex biological samples
US5839438A (en)*1996-09-101998-11-24Neuralmed, Inc.Computer-based neural network system and method for medical diagnosis and interpretation
CA2270527A1 (en)*1996-11-041998-05-143-Dimensional Pharmaceuticals, Inc.System, method, and computer program product for the visualization and interactive processing and analysis of chemical data
US6571227B1 (en)*1996-11-042003-05-273-Dimensional Pharmaceuticals, Inc.Method, system and computer program product for non-linear mapping of multi-dimensional data
CA2270132A1 (en)*1996-11-061998-05-14Sequenom, Inc.Dna diagnostics based on mass spectrometry
US6157921A (en)1998-05-012000-12-05Barnhill Technologies, LlcEnhancing knowledge discovery using support vector machines in a distributed network environment
US5905258A (en)1997-06-021999-05-18Advanced Research & Techology InstituteHybrid ion mobility and mass spectrometer
NZ516848A (en)*1997-06-202004-03-26Ciphergen Biosystems IncRetentate chromatography apparatus with applications in biology and medicine
US6081797A (en)*1997-07-092000-06-27American Heuristics CorporationAdaptive temporal correlation network
US5974412A (en)*1997-09-241999-10-26Sapient Health NetworkIntelligent query system for automatically indexing information in a database and automatically categorizing users
CA2321160A1 (en)1998-02-131999-08-19Oxford Glycosciences (Uk) Ltd.Methods and compositions for diagnosis of hepatoma
GB9805477D0 (en)1998-03-131998-05-13Oxford Glycosciences LimitedMethods and compositions for diagnosis of rheumatoid arthritis
US6085576A (en)*1998-03-202000-07-11Cyrano Sciences, Inc.Handheld sensing apparatus
WO1999050437A1 (en)*1998-03-301999-10-07Esa, Inc.Methodology for predicting and/or diagnosing disease
US6882990B1 (en)*1999-05-012005-04-19Biowulf Technologies, LlcMethods of identifying biological patterns using multiple data sets
US6723564B2 (en)1998-05-072004-04-20Sequenom, Inc.IR MALDI mass spectrometry of nucleic acids using liquid matrices
KR100691043B1 (en)1998-05-092007-03-09아이코니시스 인코포레이티드 Computer Controlled Fetal Cell Inclusion Rare Cell Diagnostic Methods and Devices
US6077693A (en)*1998-05-142000-06-20Incyte Pharmaceuticals, Inc.Polynucleotide encoding a promonocyte associated protein
CA2356195A1 (en)*1998-12-232000-06-29Medispectra, Inc.Optical methods and systems for cervical screening
CA2359649A1 (en)1999-02-162000-08-24Lance A. LiottaLcm (laser capture microdissection) for cellular protein analysis
GB9905817D0 (en)1999-03-121999-05-05Oxford Glycosciences Uk LtdMethods
US7057168B2 (en)*1999-07-212006-06-06Sionex CorporationSystems for differential ion mobility analysis
US6329652B1 (en)1999-07-282001-12-11Eastman Kodak CompanyMethod for comparison of similar samples in liquid chromatography/mass spectrometry
US6615199B1 (en)*1999-08-312003-09-02Accenture, LlpAbstraction factory in a base services pattern environment
WO2001020043A1 (en)1999-09-172001-03-22Affymetrix, Inc.Method of cluster analysis of gene expression profiles
CA2388595C (en)1999-10-272010-12-21Biowulf Technologies, LlcMethods and devices for identifying patterns in biological systems and methods for uses thereof
WO2001031579A2 (en)1999-10-272001-05-03Barnhill Technologies, LlcMethods and devices for identifying patterns in biological patterns
DE10021737C2 (en)2000-05-042002-10-17Hermann Haller Method and device for the qualitative and / or quantitative determination of a protein and / or peptide pattern of a liquid sample which is taken from the human or animal body
AU2001269877A1 (en)*2000-06-192002-01-02Correlogic Systems, Inc.Heuristic method of classification
US6680203B2 (en)*2000-07-102004-01-20Esperion Therapeutics, Inc.Fourier transform mass spectrometry of complex biological samples
AU2001273486A1 (en)*2000-07-172002-01-30Labnetics, Inc.Method and apparatus for the processing of remotely collected electronic information characterizing properties of biological entities
IL153856A0 (en)*2000-07-182003-07-31Correlogic Systems IncA process for discriminating between biological states based on hidden patterns from biological data
CN1262337C (en)*2000-11-162006-07-05赛弗根生物系统股份有限公司Method for analyzing mass spectra
EP1459235B1 (en)2001-01-242011-01-19Health Discovery CorporationMethods of identifying patterns in biological systems and uses thereof
CN1636068A (en)2001-02-162005-07-06赛弗根生物系统股份有限公司 Method for correlating gene expression profiles with protein expression profiles
EP1385998A1 (en)2001-04-192004-02-04Ciphergen Biosystems, Inc.Biomolecule characterization using mass spectrometry and affinity tags
US20020160420A1 (en)2001-04-302002-10-31George JackowskiProcess for diagnosis of physiological conditions by characterization of proteomic materials
WO2003014735A1 (en)*2001-08-032003-02-20General Hospital CorporationSystem, process and diagnostic arrangement establishing and monitoring medication doses for patients
JP2005500543A (en)*2001-08-132005-01-06ビヨンド ジェノミクス, インコーポレイテッド Methods and systems for profiling biological systems
US20020193950A1 (en)2002-02-252002-12-19Gavin Edward J.Method for analyzing mass spectra
JP4585167B2 (en)*2002-11-292010-11-24東芝医用システムエンジニアリング株式会社 X-ray computed tomography system

Also Published As

Publication numberPublication date
NO20030251D0 (en)2003-01-17
KR101054732B1 (en)2011-08-05
EP1386275A2 (en)2004-02-04
US20050043593A9 (en)2005-02-24
BR0112667A (en)2006-05-09
JP2013101130A (en)2013-05-23
JP2004519659A (en)2004-07-02
US20030004402A1 (en)2003-01-02
CN1484806A (en)2004-03-24
CA2415775A1 (en)2002-01-24
EA200300161A1 (en)2003-12-25
NO20030251L (en)2003-03-17
NZ524171A (en)2006-09-29
SG144731A1 (en)2008-08-28
AU2010246364A1 (en)2010-12-16
WO2002006829A2 (en)2002-01-24
IL153856A0 (en)2003-07-31
US20050260671A1 (en)2005-11-24
JP5246984B2 (en)2013-07-24
KR20030074585A (en)2003-09-19
US6925389B2 (en)2005-08-02
MXPA03000506A (en)2004-09-10
WO2002006829A3 (en)2003-11-20

Similar Documents

PublicationPublication DateTitle
US6925389B2 (en)Process for discriminating between biological states based on hidden patterns from biological data
US8478534B2 (en)Method for detecting discriminatory data patterns in multiple sets of data and diagnosing disease
US10713590B2 (en)Bagged filtering method for selection and deselection of features for classification
Conrads et al.High-resolution serum proteomic features for ovarian cancer detection.
Li et al.Data mining techniques for cancer detection using serum proteomic profiling
Li et al.Discovery of significant rules for classifying cancer diagnosis data
US20020095260A1 (en)Methods for efficiently mining broad data sets for biological markers
US20100017356A1 (en)Method for Identifying Protein Patterns in Mass Spectrometry
Horng et al.An expert system to classify microarray gene expression data using gene selection by decision tree
US20060064253A1 (en)Multiple high-resolution serum proteomic features for ovarian cancer detection
US20060287969A1 (en)Methods of processing biological data
Huang et al.Gene expression profiling for prediction of clinical characteristics of breast cancer
AU2008201163A1 (en)A process for discriminating between biological states based on hidden patterns from biological data
Oh et al.An extended Markov blanket approach to proteomic biomarker detection from high-resolution mass spectrometry data
Leung et al.Gene selection for brain cancer classification
Zubi et al.Sequence mining in DNA chips data for diagnosing cancer patients
Kavousi et al.A post-method condition analysis of using ensemble machine learning for cancer prognosis and diagnosis: a systematic review
Mohamad et al.A recursive genetic algorithm to automatically select genes for cancer classification
Hu et al.Gene Selection in Terms of Performance Based Consistency
Luo et al.Weighted top score pair method for gene selection and classification
Ahluwalia et al.Proteomic pattern analysis using neural networks
Sung et al.Fundamentals of Cancer Genomics and Proteomics
Lakshmidevi et al.SUPERVISED MULTI ATTRIBUTE GENE MANIPULATION FOR CANCER
WilliamsEvaluating cancer protein identification from mass spectroscopy data

Legal Events

DateCodeTitleDescription
MK5Application lapsed section 142(2)(e) - patent request and compl. specification not accepted

[8]ページ先頭

©2009-2025 Movatter.jp