Empowering study of breast cancer data with application of artificial intelligence technology: promises, challenges, and use cases.

Journal: Clinical & experimental metastasis
Published Date:

Abstract

In healthcare, artificial intelligence (AI) technologies have the potential to create significant value by improving time-sensitive outcomes while lowering error rates for each patient. Diagnostic images, clinical notes, and reports are increasingly generated and stored in electronic medical records. This heterogeneous data presenting us with challenges in data analytics and reusability that is by nature has high complexity, thereby necessitating novel ways to store, manage and process, and reuse big data. This presents an urgent need to develop new, scalable, and expandable AI infrastructure and analytical methods that can enable healthcare providers to access knowledge for individual patients, yielding better decisions and outcomes. In this review article, we briefly discuss the nature of data in breast cancer study and the role of AI for generating "smart data" which offer actionable information that supports the better decision for personalized medicine for individual patients. In our view, the biggest challenge is to create a system that makes data robust and smart for healthcare providers and patients that can lead to more effective clinical decision-making, improved health outcomes, and ultimately, managing the healthcare outcomes and costs. We highlight some of the challenges in using breast cancer data and propose the need for an AI-driven environment to address them. We illustrate our vision with practical use cases and discuss a path for empowering the study of breast cancer databases with the application of AI and future directions.

Authors

  • Maryam Panahiazar
    Robert D. and Patricia E. Kern Center for the Science of Health Care Delivery, Mayo Clinic, Rochester, MN, USA.
  • Nolan Chen
    Department of Computer Science, University of California Berkeley, Berkeley, CA, USA.
  • Dmytro Lituiev
    From the Department of Radiology and Biomedical Imaging (Y.D., J.H.S., H.T., R.H., N.W.J., T.P.C., M.S.A., C.M.A., S.C.B., R.R.F., S.Y.H., Y.S., R.A.H., M.H.P., B.L.F.) and Institute for Computational Health Sciences (J.H.S., M.G.K., H.T., D.L., K.A.Z., D.H.), University of California, San Francisco, 550 Parnassus Ave, San Francisco, CA 94143; Department of Electrical Engineering and Computer Sciences, University of California, Berkeley, Berkeley, Calif (Y.D.); and Department of Radiology, University of California, Davis, Sacramento, Calif (L.N.).
  • Dexter Hadley
    Institute for Computational Health Sciences, University of California, San Francisco.