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Radiomics in Oncology, Part 1: Technical Principles and Gastrointestinal Application in CT and MRI
SIMPLE SUMMARY: Part I is an overview aimed to investigate some technical principles and the main fields of radiomic application in gastrointestinal oncologic imaging (CT and MRI) with a focus on diagnosis, prediction prognosis, and assessment of response to therapy in gastrointestinal cancers, desc...
Autores principales: | , , , , , , , , , , , , , , |
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Formato: | Online Artículo Texto |
Lenguaje: | English |
Publicado: |
MDPI
2021
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Materias: | |
Acceso en línea: | https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8196591/ https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/34063937 http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/cancers13112522 |
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author | Caruso, Damiano Polici, Michela Zerunian, Marta Pucciarelli, Francesco Guido, Gisella Polidori, Tiziano Landolfi, Federica Nicolai, Matteo Lucertini, Elena Tarallo, Mariarita Bracci, Benedetta Nacci, Ilaria Rucci, Carlotta Iannicelli, Elsa Laghi, Andrea |
author_facet | Caruso, Damiano Polici, Michela Zerunian, Marta Pucciarelli, Francesco Guido, Gisella Polidori, Tiziano Landolfi, Federica Nicolai, Matteo Lucertini, Elena Tarallo, Mariarita Bracci, Benedetta Nacci, Ilaria Rucci, Carlotta Iannicelli, Elsa Laghi, Andrea |
author_sort | Caruso, Damiano |
collection | PubMed |
description | SIMPLE SUMMARY: Part I is an overview aimed to investigate some technical principles and the main fields of radiomic application in gastrointestinal oncologic imaging (CT and MRI) with a focus on diagnosis, prediction prognosis, and assessment of response to therapy in gastrointestinal cancers, describing mostly the results for each pre-eminent tumor. In particular, this paper provides a general description of the main radiomic drawbacks and future challenges, which limit radiomic application in clinical setting as routine. Further investigations need to standardize and validate the Radiomics as a helpful tool in management of oncologic patients. In that context, Radiomics has been playing a relevant role and could be considered as a future imaging landscape. ABSTRACT: Radiomics has been playing a pivotal role in oncological translational imaging, particularly in cancer diagnosis, prediction prognosis, and therapy response assessment. Recently, promising results were achieved in management of cancer patients by extracting mineable high-dimensional data from medical images, supporting clinicians in decision-making process in the new era of target therapy and personalized medicine. Radiomics could provide quantitative data, extracted from medical images, that could reflect microenvironmental tumor heterogeneity, which might be a useful information for treatment tailoring. Thus, it could be helpful to overcome the main limitations of traditional tumor biopsy, often affected by bias in tumor sampling, lack of repeatability and possible procedure complications. This quantitative approach has been widely investigated as a non-invasive and an objective imaging biomarker in cancer patients; however, it is not applied as a clinical routine due to several limitations related to lack of standardization and validation of images acquisition protocols, features segmentation, extraction, processing, and data analysis. This field is in continuous evolution in each type of cancer, and results support the idea that in the future Radiomics might be a reliable application in oncologic imaging. The first part of this review aimed to describe some radiomic technical principles and clinical applications to gastrointestinal oncologic imaging (CT and MRI) with a focus on diagnosis, prediction prognosis, and assessment of response to therapy. |
format | Online Article Text |
id | pubmed-8196591 |
institution | National Center for Biotechnology Information |
language | English |
publishDate | 2021 |
publisher | MDPI |
record_format | MEDLINE/PubMed |
spelling | pubmed-81965912021-06-13 Radiomics in Oncology, Part 1: Technical Principles and Gastrointestinal Application in CT and MRI Caruso, Damiano Polici, Michela Zerunian, Marta Pucciarelli, Francesco Guido, Gisella Polidori, Tiziano Landolfi, Federica Nicolai, Matteo Lucertini, Elena Tarallo, Mariarita Bracci, Benedetta Nacci, Ilaria Rucci, Carlotta Iannicelli, Elsa Laghi, Andrea Cancers (Basel) Review SIMPLE SUMMARY: Part I is an overview aimed to investigate some technical principles and the main fields of radiomic application in gastrointestinal oncologic imaging (CT and MRI) with a focus on diagnosis, prediction prognosis, and assessment of response to therapy in gastrointestinal cancers, describing mostly the results for each pre-eminent tumor. In particular, this paper provides a general description of the main radiomic drawbacks and future challenges, which limit radiomic application in clinical setting as routine. Further investigations need to standardize and validate the Radiomics as a helpful tool in management of oncologic patients. In that context, Radiomics has been playing a relevant role and could be considered as a future imaging landscape. ABSTRACT: Radiomics has been playing a pivotal role in oncological translational imaging, particularly in cancer diagnosis, prediction prognosis, and therapy response assessment. Recently, promising results were achieved in management of cancer patients by extracting mineable high-dimensional data from medical images, supporting clinicians in decision-making process in the new era of target therapy and personalized medicine. Radiomics could provide quantitative data, extracted from medical images, that could reflect microenvironmental tumor heterogeneity, which might be a useful information for treatment tailoring. Thus, it could be helpful to overcome the main limitations of traditional tumor biopsy, often affected by bias in tumor sampling, lack of repeatability and possible procedure complications. This quantitative approach has been widely investigated as a non-invasive and an objective imaging biomarker in cancer patients; however, it is not applied as a clinical routine due to several limitations related to lack of standardization and validation of images acquisition protocols, features segmentation, extraction, processing, and data analysis. This field is in continuous evolution in each type of cancer, and results support the idea that in the future Radiomics might be a reliable application in oncologic imaging. The first part of this review aimed to describe some radiomic technical principles and clinical applications to gastrointestinal oncologic imaging (CT and MRI) with a focus on diagnosis, prediction prognosis, and assessment of response to therapy. MDPI 2021-05-21 /pmc/articles/PMC8196591/ /pubmed/34063937 http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/cancers13112522 Text en © 2021 by the authors. https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/Licensee MDPI, Basel, Switzerland. This article is an open access article distributed under the terms and conditions of the Creative Commons Attribution (CC BY) license (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/). |
spellingShingle | Review Caruso, Damiano Polici, Michela Zerunian, Marta Pucciarelli, Francesco Guido, Gisella Polidori, Tiziano Landolfi, Federica Nicolai, Matteo Lucertini, Elena Tarallo, Mariarita Bracci, Benedetta Nacci, Ilaria Rucci, Carlotta Iannicelli, Elsa Laghi, Andrea Radiomics in Oncology, Part 1: Technical Principles and Gastrointestinal Application in CT and MRI |
title | Radiomics in Oncology, Part 1: Technical Principles and Gastrointestinal Application in CT and MRI |
title_full | Radiomics in Oncology, Part 1: Technical Principles and Gastrointestinal Application in CT and MRI |
title_fullStr | Radiomics in Oncology, Part 1: Technical Principles and Gastrointestinal Application in CT and MRI |
title_full_unstemmed | Radiomics in Oncology, Part 1: Technical Principles and Gastrointestinal Application in CT and MRI |
title_short | Radiomics in Oncology, Part 1: Technical Principles and Gastrointestinal Application in CT and MRI |
title_sort | radiomics in oncology, part 1: technical principles and gastrointestinal application in ct and mri |
topic | Review |
url | https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8196591/ https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/34063937 http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/cancers13112522 |
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