Pirozzi Maria Agnese, Franza Federica, Chianese Marianna, Papallo Simone, De Rosa Alessandro Pasquale, Nardo Federica Di, Caiazzo Giuseppina, Esposito Fabrizio, Donisi Leandro
Department of Advanced Medical and Surgical Sciences, University of Campania Luigi Vanvitelli, Piazza Luigi Miraglia, 2, Naples 80138, Italy.
Department of Advanced Medical and Surgical Sciences, University of Campania Luigi Vanvitelli, Piazza Luigi Miraglia, 2, Naples 80138, Italy.
Comput Methods Programs Biomed. 2025 Jun;266:108771. doi: 10.1016/j.cmpb.2025.108771. Epub 2025 Apr 10.
Advances in MRI techniques continue to open new avenues to investigate the structure and function of the human brain. Radiomics, involving the extraction of quantitative image features, and connectomics, involving the estimation of structural and functional neural connections, from large amounts and different types of MRI data sets, represent two key research areas for advancing neuroimaging while exploiting progress in computational and theoretical modelling applied to MRI. This systematic literature review aimed at exploring the combination of radiomics and connectomics in human brain MRI studies, highlighting how the combination of these approaches can provide novel or additional insights into the human brain under normal and pathological conditions. The review was conducted according to the Preferred Reported Item for Systematic Reviews and Meta-Analyses (PRISMA) statement, seeking documents from Scopus and PubMed archives. Eleven studies (out of the initial 675 records) have met the established criteria and reported combined approaches from radiomics and connectomics. Three subgroups of approaches were identified, based on the MRI modalities used to obtain radiomic and connectomic features. The first group of 3 studies combined radiomics and connectomics applied to structural MRI (sMRI) data sets; the second group of 5 studies combined radiomics applied to sMRI data and connectomics applied to diffusion (dMRI) and/or functional MRI (fMRI) data sets; the third group of 3 studies combined radiomics and connectomics applied to fMRI. This review highlighted the recent growing interest in combining MRI-based radiomics and connectomics to explore the human brain for neurological, psychiatric, and oncological conditions. Current methodologies and challenges were discussed, pointing out future research directions to improve or standardize these approaches and the gaps to be filled to advance the field.
磁共振成像(MRI)技术的进步不断为研究人类大脑的结构和功能开辟新途径。放射组学涉及从大量不同类型的MRI数据集中提取定量图像特征,而连接组学则涉及估计结构和功能神经连接,它们代表了推进神经成像研究的两个关键领域,同时利用了应用于MRI的计算和理论建模方面的进展。本系统文献综述旨在探索放射组学和连接组学在人类大脑MRI研究中的结合,强调这些方法的结合如何能够在正常和病理条件下为人类大脑提供新的见解或更多信息。该综述按照系统评价和Meta分析的首选报告项目(PRISMA)声明进行,从Scopus和PubMed数据库中检索文献。(最初的675条记录中)有11项研究符合既定标准,并报告了放射组学和连接组学的联合方法。根据用于获取放射组学和连接组学特征的MRI模态,确定了三个方法亚组。第一组的3项研究将应用于结构MRI(sMRI)数据集的放射组学和连接组学相结合;第二组的5项研究将应用于sMRI数据的放射组学与应用于扩散加权成像(dMRI)和/或功能MRI(fMRI)数据集的连接组学相结合;第三组的3项研究将应用于fMRI的放射组学和连接组学相结合。本综述强调了最近越来越多的人对结合基于MRI的放射组学和连接组学来探索人类大脑的神经学、精神病学和肿瘤学状况感兴趣。讨论了当前的方法和挑战,指出了未来改进或规范这些方法的研究方向以及该领域有待填补的空白。