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A narrative review of deep learning applications in lung cancer research: from screening to prognostication

Cited 6 time in Web of Science Cited 4 time in Scopus
Authors

Lee, Jong Hyuk; Hwang, Eui Jin; Kim, Hyungjin; Park, Chang Min

Issue Date
2022-06
Publisher
Society for Translational Medicine (STM)
Citation
Translational Lung Cancer Research, Vol.11 No.6, pp.1217-1229
Abstract
© Translational Lung Cancer Research. All rights reserved.Background and Objective: Deep learning (DL) algorithms have been developed for various tasks, including lung nodule detection on chest radiographs or lung cancer computed tomography screening, potential candidate selection in lung cancer screening, malignancy prediction for indeterminate pulmonary nodules, lung cancer staging, treatment response prediction, prognostication, and prediction of genetic mutations in lung cancer. Furthermore, these DL algorithms have been applied in various clinical settings in order for them to be generalized in real-world clinical practice. Multiple DL algorithms have been corroborated to be on par with experts or current clinical prediction models for several specific tasks. However, no article has yet comprehensively reviewed DL algorithms dedicated to lung cancer research. This narrative review presents an overview of the literature dealing with DL techniques applied in lung cancer research and briefly summarizes the results according to the DL algorithms clinical use cases. Methods: we performed a narrative review by searching the Embase and OVID-MEDLINE databases for articles published in English from October, 2016 until September, 2021 and reviewing the bibliographies of key references to identify important literature related to DL in lung cancer research. The background, development, results, and clinical implications of each DL algorithm are briefly discussed. Lastly, we end this review article by highlighting future directions in lung cancer research using DL techniques. Key Content and Findings: DL algorithms have been introduced to show comparable or higher performance than human experts in various clinical settings. Specifically, they have been actively applied to detect lung nodules in chest radiographs or computed tomography (CT) examinations, optimize candidate selection for lung cancer screening (LCS), predict the malignancy of lung nodules, stage lung cancer, and predict treatment response, patients prognoses, and genetic mutations in lung cancers. Conclusions: DL algorithms have corroborated their potential value for various tasks, ranging from lung cancer screening to prognostication of lung cancer patients. Future research is warranted for the clinical application of these algorithms in daily clinical practice and verification of their real-world clinical usefulness.
ISSN
2218-6751
URI
https://hdl.handle.net/10371/184680
DOI
https://doi.org/10.21037/tlcr-21-1012
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