/hcv-prediction

Experiments for Data-Centric Approach to Hepatitis C Virus Severity Prediction

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Data-Centric Approach to Hepatitis C Virus Severity Prediction

This repository contains the experiments performed in the paper Data-Centric Approach to Hepatitis C Virus Severity Prediction.

Abstract

Every year, around 1.5 million of the world population succumbs to the Hepatitis C Virus. 70% of these cases develop chronic infection and cirrhosis within the next 20 years. Because there is no effective treatment for HCV, it is critical to predicting the virus in its early stages. The study’s goal is to define a data-driven approach for accurately detecting HCV severity in patients. Our approach achieves the highest accuracy of 86.79% compared to 70.89% using the standard approach.

Citation

If the code or publication helps you, kindly make sure to cite it.

Sharma, A., Arora, A., Gupta, A., Singh, P.K. (2022). Data-Centric Approach to Hepatitis C Virus Severity Prediction. In: Abraham, A., Gandhi, N., Hanne, T., Hong, TP., Nogueira Rios, T., Ding, W. (eds) Intelligent Systems Design and Applications. ISDA 2021. Lecture Notes in Networks and Systems, vol 418. Springer, Cham. https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-030-96308-8_39

@inproceedings{10.1007/978-3-030-96308-8_39,
    title        = {Data-Centric Approach to Hepatitis C Virus Severity Prediction},
    author       = {Sharma, Aniket and Arora, Ashok and Gupta, Anuj and Singh, Pramod Kumar},
    year         = 2022,
    booktitle    = {Intelligent Systems Design and Applications},
    publisher    = {Springer International Publishing},
    address      = {Cham},
    pages        = {421--431},
    isbn         = {978-3-030-96308-8},
    editor       = {Abraham, Ajith and Gandhi, Niketa and Hanne, Thomas and Hong, Tzung-Pei and Nogueira Rios, Tatiane and Ding, Weiping},
    abstract     = {Every year, around 1.5 million of the world population succumbs to the Hepatitis C Virus. 70{\%} of these cases develop chronic infection and cirrhosis within the next 20 years. Because there is no effective treatment for HCV, it is critical to predicting the virus in its early stages. The study's goal is to define a data-driven approach for accurately detecting HCV severity in patients. Our approach achieves the highest accuracy of 86.79{\%} compared to 70.89{\%} using the standard approach.}
}