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Radiomics in pancreatic neuroendocrine tumors: methodological issues and clinical significance

Journal

Publisher

SPRINGER
DOI: 10.1007/s00259-021-05338-8

Keywords

Radiomics; Pancreatic neuroendocrine tumors; Texture analysis; CT; MRI; PET

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Radiomics in the context of PanNETs focuses on methods, technical approaches, and clinical applications. Studies have shown potential in tumor grade prediction, differential diagnosis, and assessment of tumor behavior, but further validation and optimization are needed for clinical application.
Purpose To present the state-of-art of radiomics in the context of pancreatic neuroendocrine tumors (PanNETs), with a focus on the methodological and technical approaches used, to support the search of guidelines for optimal applications. Furthermore, an up-to-date overview of the current clinical applications of radiomics in the field of PanNETs is provided. Methods Original articles were searched on PubMed and Science Direct with specific keywords. Evaluations of the selected studies have been focused mainly on (i) the general radiomic workflow and the assessment of radiomic features robustness/reproducibility, as well as on the major clinical applications and investigations accomplished so far with radiomics in the field of PanNETs: (ii) grade prediction, (iii) differential diagnosis from other neoplasms, (iv) assessment of tumor behavior and aggressiveness, and (v) treatment response prediction. Results Thirty-one articles involving PanNETs radiomic-related objectives were selected. In regard to the grade differentiation task, yielded AUCs are currently in the range of 0.7-0.9. For differential diagnosis, the majority of studies are still focused on the preliminary identification of discriminative radiomic features. Limited information is known on the prediction of tumors aggressiveness and of treatment response. Conclusions Radiomics is recently expanding in the setting of PanNETs. From the analysis of the published data, it is emerging how, prior to clinical application, further validations are necessary and methodological implementations require optimization. Nevertheless, this new discipline might have the potential in assisting the current urgent need of improving the management strategies in PanNETs patients.

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