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Combining Molecular, Imaging, and Clinical Data Analysis for Predicting Cancer Prognosis

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URI: http://hdl.handle.net/10498/27603

DOI: 10.3390/cancers14133215

ISSN: 2072-6694

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Author/s
Lobato-Delgado, Bárbara; Priego Torres, Blanca MaríaAuthority UCA; Sánchez Morillo, DanielAuthority UCA
Date
2022-07
Department
Ingeniería en Automática, Electrónica, Arquitectura y Redes de Computadores
Source
Cancers, Vol. 14, Núm. 13
Abstract
Cancer is one of the most detrimental diseases globally. Accordingly, the prognosis prediction of cancer patients has become a field of interest. In this review, we have gathered 43 stateof- the-art scientific papers published in the last 6 years that built cancer prognosis predictive models using multimodal data. We have defined the multimodality of data as four main types: clinical, anatomopathological, molecular, and medical imaging; and we have expanded on the information that each modality provides. The 43 studies were divided into three categories based on the modelling approach taken, and their characteristics were further discussed together with current issues and future trends. Research in this area has evolved from survival analysis through statistical modelling using mainly clinical and anatomopathological data to the prediction of cancer prognosis through a multi-faceted data-driven approach by the integration of complex, multimodal, and high-dimensional data containing multi-omics and medical imaging information and by applying Machine Learning and, more recently, Deep Learning techniques. This review concludes that cancer prognosis predictive multimodal models are capable of better stratifying patients, which can improve clinical management and contribute to the implementation of personalised medicine as well as provide new and valuable knowledge on cancer biology and its progression.
Subjects
cancer; survival analysis; prognosis prediction; patient risk stratification; multimodal data; data integration; Artificial Intelligence; machine learning
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This work is under a Creative Commons License Atribución 4.0 Internacional

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