A Comprehensive Review of Radiomics in Pulmonary Nodule Management: Clinical Applications and Standardization Dilemmas
Guo Chen, Zuxin Wang, Hua JiangLung cancer is the most common and fatal malignant tumour. Early detection and treatment are likely to reduce mortality, but most pulmonary nodules identified during routine health checks are harmless. Consequently, a clear distinction between benign and malignant nodules is vital to improve early detection and reduce unnecessary interventions. Radiomics, a new omics technology, can be used to extract high-dimensional quantitative features from medical images, providing a profound understanding of tumour pathophysiology. Radiomics has attracted the attention of medical researchers since its formal definition by the Dutch researcher Lambin et al. in 2012. The number of research papers on radiomics has grown tremendously over the past few years. At present, it is used to predict pulmonary nodule malignancy, for noninvasive risk stratification, for integration with genomics to identify genetic mutations associated with lung cancer, and for evaluation of therapeutic responses. With this review, we summarise the literature on radiomics of pulmonary nodules, discuss how it could be used in nodule management, and address the current challenges and future directions for improving precision oncology