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      Radiomics, a Promising New Discipline: Example of Hepatocellular Carcinoma.

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          Abstract

          Radiomics is a discipline that involves studying medical images through their digital data. Using "artificial intelligence" algorithms, radiomics utilizes quantitative and high-throughput analysis of an image's textural richness to obtain relevant information for clinicians, from diagnosis assistance to therapeutic guidance. Exploitation of these data could allow for a more detailed characterization of each phenotype, for each patient, making radiomics a new biomarker of interest, highly promising in the era of precision medicine. Moreover, radiomics is non-invasive, cost-effective, and easily reproducible in time. In the field of oncology, it performs an analysis of the entire tumor, which is impossible with a single biopsy but is essential for understanding the tumor's heterogeneity and is known to be closely related to prognosis. However, current results are sometimes less accurate than expected and often require the addition of non-radiomics data to create a performing model. To highlight the strengths and weaknesses of this new technology, we take the example of hepatocellular carcinoma and show how radiomics could facilitate its diagnosis in difficult cases, predict certain histological features, and estimate treatment response, whether medical or surgical.

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          Author and article information

          Journal
          Diagnostics (Basel)
          Diagnostics (Basel, Switzerland)
          MDPI AG
          2075-4418
          2075-4418
          Mar 30 2023
          : 13
          : 7
          Affiliations
          [1 ] Hepatology Unit, University Hospital of Nice, 151 Route de Saint Antoine de Ginestière, 06200 Nice, France.
          [2 ] Department of Diagnosis and Interventional Imaging, University Hospital of Nice, 151 Route de Saint Antoine de Ginestière, 06200 Nice, France.
          [3 ] Department of Nuclear Medicine, University Hospital of Nice, 151 Route de Saint Antoine de Ginestière, 06200 Nice, France.
          [4 ] CN3S, I3S, Université Côte d'Azur, 06000 Nice, France.
          [5 ] Saint Joseph Hospital, 26 Bd de Louvain, 13008 Marseille, France.
          [6 ] Centre Antoine-Lacassagne, Department of Nuclear Medicine, 33 Av. de Valombrose, 06100 Nice, France.
          [7 ] TIRO-UMR E 4320, Université Côte d'Azur, 06000 Nice, France.
          [8 ] INSERM, U1065, C3M, Université Côte d'Azur, 06000 Nice, France.
          Article
          diagnostics13071303
          10.3390/diagnostics13071303
          10093101
          37046521
          c2582d67-c902-4281-826a-9105eea34c6b
          History

          radiomics,artificial intelligence,hepatocellular carcinoma,precision medicine

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