4.1 Review

Application of radiomics in precision prediction of diagnosis and treatment of gastric cancer

Journal

JAPANESE JOURNAL OF RADIOLOGY
Volume 41, Issue 3, Pages 245-257

Publisher

SPRINGER
DOI: 10.1007/s11604-022-01352-4

Keywords

Gastric cancer; Quantitative image features; Radiomics; Diagnosis

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Gastric cancer is a common malignant tumor with high mortality rates worldwide. Early detection and diagnosis are crucial for improving patient prognosis. Radiomics, which quantifies tumor phenotypes using quantitative image features, has been applied to various aspects of gastric cancer, including histopathological grading, differential diagnosis, therapeutic efficacy, and prognosis evaluation. This review evaluates the research status and progress of radiomics in gastric cancer and discusses its workflow and clinical application. The included studies indicated positive results, highlighting the potential of radiomics in early prediction and diagnosis of gastric cancer. However, challenges in radiomics development were also identified.
Gastric cancer is one of the most common malignant tumors. Although some progress has been made in chemotherapy and surgery, it is still one of the highest mortalities in the world. Therefore, early detection, diagnosis and treatment are very important to improve the prognosis of patients. In recent years, with the proposal of the concept of radiomics, it has been gradually applied to histopathological grading, differential diagnosis, therapeutic efficacy and prognosis evaluation of gastric cancer, whose advantage is to comprehensively quantify the tumor phenotype using a large number of quantitative image features, so as to predict and diagnose the lesion area of gastric cancer early. The purpose of this review is to evaluate the research status and progress of radiomics in gastric cancer, and reviewed the workflow and clinical application of radiomics. The 27 original studies on the application of radiomics in gastric cancer were included from web of science database search results from 2017 to 2021, the number of patients included ranged from 30 to 1680, and the models used were based on the combination of radiomics signature and clinical factors. Most of these studies showed positive results, the median radiomics quality score (RQS) for all studies was 36.1%, and the development prospect and challenges of radiomics development were prospected. In general, radiomics has great potential in improving the early prediction and diagnosis of gastric cancer, and provides an unprecedented opportunity for clinical practice to improve the decision support of gastric cancer treatment at a low cost.

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