AUTHOR=Capobianco Enrico TITLE=Precision Oncology: The Promise of Big Data and the Legacy of Small Data JOURNAL=Frontiers in ICT VOLUME=4 YEAR=2017 URL=https://www.frontiersin.org/journals/ict/articles/10.3389/fict.2017.00022 DOI=10.3389/fict.2017.00022 ISSN=2297-198X ABSTRACT=
Big data are expected to exert profound impacts on medicine. High-throughput technologies, electronic medical records, high-resolution imaging, multiplexed omics, these are examples of fields that are progressing at a fast pace. Because they all yield complex heterogeneous data types, managing such variety and volumes is a challenge. While the computation power required to analyze them is available, the main difficulty consists in interpreting the results. In light of the emerging precision medicine paradigm, oncology is influenced by digital phenotypes characterizing disease expression, In particular, digital biomarkers could become critical for the evaluation of clinical endpoints. Currently, integrative approaches are conceived for the analysis of multi-evidenced data, i.e., data generated from multiple sources, such as cells, organs, individual lifestyle and social habits, environment, population dynamics, etc. The granularity, the scales of measurement, the model prediction accuracy, these are factors justifying an ongoing progressive differentiation from evidence-based medicine, typically based on a relatively small and unique scale of the experiments, thus well assimilated by a mathematical or statistical model. A premise of precision medicine is the