scikit-survival is a Python module for survival analysis built on top of scikit-learn. It allows doing survival analysis while utilizing the power of scikit-learn, e.g., for pre-processing or doing cross-validation.
The objective in survival analysis (also referred to as reliability analysis in engineering) is to establish a connection between covariates and the time of an event. What makes survival analysis differ from traditional machine learning is the fact that parts of the training data can only be partially observed – they are censored.
For instance, in a clinical study, patients are often monitored for a particular time period, and events occurring in this particular period are recorded. If a patient experiences an event, the exact time of the event can be recorded – the patient’s record is uncensored. In contrast, right censored records refer to patients that remained event-free during the study period and it is unknown whether an event has or has not occurred after the study ended. Consequently, survival analysis demands for models that take this unique characteristic of such a dataset into account.
- Python 3.5 or later
- cvxpy
- cvxopt
- numexpr
- numpy 1.10 or later
- pandas 0.19 or later
- scikit-learn 0.19 or 0.20
- scipy 0.17 or later
- C/C++ compiler
The easiest way to get started is to install Anaconda and setup an environment:
conda install -c sebp scikit-survival
First, create a new environment, named sksurv
:
python ci/list-requirements.py requirements/dev.txt > /tmp/requirements.txt conda create -n sksurv -c sebp python=3 --file /tmp/requirements.txt
To work in this environment, activate
it as follows:
source activate sksurv
If you are on Windows, run the above command without the source
in the beginning.
Once you set up your build environment, install submodules into your local repository:
git submodule update --init
Then compile the C/C++ extensions and install the package by running:
python setup.py install
Alternatively, if you want to use the package without installing it, you can compile the extensions in place by running:
python setup.py build_ext --inplace
To check everything is setup correctly run the test suite by executing:
nosetests
An Introduction to Survival Analysis with scikit-survival is available as Jupyter notebook.
The source code is thoroughly documented and a HTML version of the API documentation is available at https://scikit-survival.readthedocs.io/en/latest/.
You can generate the documentation yourself using Sphinx 1.4 or later:
cd doc make html xdg-open _build/html/index.html
Please cite the following papers if you are using scikit-survival.
1. Pölsterl, S., Navab, N., and Katouzian, A., Fast Training of Support Vector Machines for Survival Analysis. Machine Learning and Knowledge Discovery in Databases: European Conference, ECML PKDD 2015, Porto, Portugal, Lecture Notes in Computer Science, vol. 9285, pp. 243-259 (2015)
2. Pölsterl, S., Navab, N., and Katouzian, A., An Efficient Training Algorithm for Kernel Survival Support Vector Machines. 4th Workshop on Machine Learning in Life Sciences, 23 September 2016, Riva del Garda, Italy
3. Pölsterl, S., Gupta, P., Wang, L., Conjeti, S., Katouzian, A., and Navab, N., Heterogeneous ensembles for predicting survival of metastatic, castrate-resistant prostate cancer patients. F1000Research, vol. 5, no. 2676 (2016).