AI Article Synopsis

  • Solitary pulmonary nodules are common findings on chest CT scans and can lead to lengthy follow-up due to their potential malignancy.
  • Clinical calculators help assess the risk of nodules being cancerous, while recent advancements in interventional pulmonology allow for improved navigation and assessment methods.
  • This study found that using label-free fiber-based optical endomicroscopy did not enhance predictive accuracy for malignancy risk, suggesting that future efforts should focus on incorporating molecular tracers.

Article Abstract

Solitary pulmonary nodules are common, often incidental findings on chest CT scans. The investigation of pulmonary nodules is time-consuming and often leads to protracted follow-up with ongoing radiological surveillance, however, clinical calculators that assess the risk of the nodule being malignant exist to help in the stratification of patients. Furthermore recent advances in interventional pulmonology include the ability to both navigate to nodules and also to perform autofluorescence endomicroscopy. In this study we assessed the efficacy of incorporating additional information from label-free fibre-based optical endomicrosopy of the nodule on assessing risk of malignancy. Using image analysis and machine learning approaches, we find that this information does not yield any gain in predictive performance in a cohort of patients. Further advances with pulmonary endomicroscopy will require the addition of molecular tracers to improve information from this procedure.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4993998PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1038/srep31372DOI Listing

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