Radiogenomics: bridging the gap between imaging and genomics for precision oncology

Genomics allows the tracing of origin and evolution of cancer at molecular scale and underpin modern cancer diagnosis and treatment systems. Yet, molecular biomarker‐guided clinical decision‐making encounters major challenges in the realm of individualized medicine, consisting of the invasiveness of...

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Veröffentlicht in:MedComm 2024-09, Vol.5 (9), p.e722-n/a
Hauptverfasser: He, Wenle, Huang, Wenhui, Zhang, Lu, Wu, Xuewei, Zhang, Shuixing, Zhang, Bin
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Genomics allows the tracing of origin and evolution of cancer at molecular scale and underpin modern cancer diagnosis and treatment systems. Yet, molecular biomarker‐guided clinical decision‐making encounters major challenges in the realm of individualized medicine, consisting of the invasiveness of procedures and the sampling errors due to high tumor heterogeneity. By contrast, medical imaging enables noninvasive and global characterization of tumors at a low cost. In recent years, radiomics has overcomes the limitations of human visual evaluation by high‐throughput quantitative analysis, enabling the comprehensive utilization of the vast amount of information underlying radiological images. The cross‐scale integration of radiomics and genomics (hereafter radiogenomics) has the enormous potential to enhance cancer decoding and act as a catalyst for digital precision medicine. Herein, we provide a comprehensive overview of the current framework and potential clinical applications of radiogenomics in patient care. We also highlight recent research advances to illustrate how radiogenomics can address common clinical problems in solid tumors such as breast cancer, lung cancer, and glioma. Finally, we analyze existing literature to outline challenges and propose solutions, while also identifying future research pathways. We believe that the perspectives shared in this survey will provide a valuable guide for researchers in the realm of radiogenomics aiming to advance precision oncology. Radiogenomics is a new tool for precisive oncology by deeply integrating radiomics and genomics. This review deconstructs the current research status of radiogenomics through the multidimensional feature engineering of radiomics and the integration patterns of radiomics and genomics, and takes gliomas, lung cancers, breast cancers, and other common cancers as examples to show the advance of the application of radiogenomics in the diagnosis, treatment, and monitoring of tumors.
ISSN:2688-2663
2688-2663
DOI:10.1002/mco2.722