IBIIS/AIMI Seminar - A.I.-Based Decision Support Systems for Precision & Participative Medicine:  Focus on Oncology and Radiomics @ Clark Center
August 23, 2019 @ 12:00 pm – 1:00 pm
2019-08-23T12:00:00+00:00
2019-08-23T13:00:00+00:00
Clark Center
S360

A.I.-Based Decision Support Systems for Precision & Participative Medicine:

Focus on Oncology and Radiomics

Join via Zoom: https://stanford.zoom.us/j/499245954

Abstract:
Precision medicine is the future of health care: please watch the animation at https://vimeo.com/241154708. As a technology-intensive and -dependent medical discipline, oncology will be at the vanguard of this impending change. However, to bring about precision medicine, a fundamental conundrum must be solved: Human cognitive capacity, typically constrained to five variables for decision making in the context of the increasing number of available biomarkers and therapeutic options, is a limiting factor to the realization of precision medicine. Given this level of complexity and the restriction of human decision making, current methods are untenable. A solution to this challenge is multifactorial decision support systems (DSSs), continuously learning artificial intelligence platforms that integrate all available data-clinical, imaging, biologic, genetic, cost-to produce validated predictive models. DSSs compare the personalized probable outcomes-toxicity, tumor control, quality of life, cost effectiveness-of various care pathway decisions to ensure optimal efficacy and economy. DSSs can be integrated into the workflows both strategically (at the multidisciplinary tumor board level to support treatment choice, eg, surgery or radiotherapy) and tactically (at the specialist level to support treatment technique, eg, prostate spacer or not). In some countries, the reimbursement of certain treatments, such as proton therapy, is already conditional on the basis that a DSS is used. DSSs have many stakeholders-clinicians, medical directors, medical insurers, patient advocacy groups-and are a natural consequence of big data in health care. Here, we provide an overview of DSSs, their challenges, opportunities, and capacity to improve clinical decision making, with an emphasis on oncology and radiomics.

About:
Philippe Lambin is a Clinician, Radiation Oncologist, with a PhD in Molecular Radiation Biology, “ERC advanced grant laureate”, co-inventor of Radiomics, multifactorial Decision Support Systems, Distributed learning, the use of immunocytokines with Radiation and pioneer in translational research with a focus on tumour hypoxia and immunotherapy. He is/has been leading 30 clinical trials. He has and is Professor at the University of Maastricht (head of the new Dpt of Precision Oncology: The D-Lab & The M-Lab, focusing on “Convergence Sciences” and Decision Support Systems. He is co-author of more than 488 peer reviewed scientific papers (Hirsch Index: 94 Google scholar), co-inventor of more than 17 patents (filed or submitted) of which 5 are in the (pre)commercialization phase and (co) promoter of more than 59 completed PhD’s.

Refreshments will be provided.