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Artificial Intelligence and Laryngeal Cancer: From Screening to Prognosis: A State of the Art Review

Yaël Bensoussan, Erik B. Vanstrum, Michael M. Johns, Anaïs Rameau

2022Otolaryngology39 citationsDOI

Abstract

OBJECTIVE: This state of the art review aims to examine contemporary advances in applications of artificial intelligence (AI) to the screening, detection, management, and prognostication of laryngeal cancer (LC). DATA SOURCES: Four bibliographic databases were searched: PubMed, EMBASE, Cochrane, and IEEE. REVIEW METHODS: A structured review of the current literature (up to January 2022) was performed. Search terms related to topics of AI in LC were identified and queried by 2 independent reviewers. Citations of selected studies and review articles were also evaluated to ensure comprehensiveness. CONCLUSIONS: AI applications in LC have encompassed a variety of data modalities, including radiomics, genomics, acoustics, clinical data, and videomics, to support screening, diagnosis, therapeutic decision making, and prognosis. However, most studies remain at the proof-of-concept level, as AI algorithms are trained on single-institution databases with limited data sets and a single data modality. IMPLICATIONS FOR PRACTICE: AI algorithms in LC will need to be trained on large multi-institutional data sets and integrate multimodal data for optimal performance and clinical utility from screening to prognosis. Out of the data types reviewed, genomics has the most potential to provide generalizable models thanks to available large multi-institutional open access genomic data sets. Voice acoustic data represent an inexpensive and accurate biomarker, which is easy and noninvasive to capture, offering a unique opportunity for screening and monitoring of LA, especially in low-resource settings.

Topics & Concepts

Computer scienceModalitiesVariety (cybernetics)Data scienceArtificial intelligenceMEDLINEPrecision medicineSystematic reviewBig dataMedicineMachine learningData miningPathologySocial scienceLawSociologyPolitical scienceHead and Neck Cancer StudiesVoice and Speech DisordersRadiomics and Machine Learning in Medical Imaging
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