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1.
Eur Radiol Exp ; 4(1): 22, 2020 04 03.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32246291

ABSTRACT

PRIMAGE is one of the largest and more ambitious research projects dealing with medical imaging, artificial intelligence and cancer treatment in children. It is a 4-year European Commission-financed project that has 16 European partners in the consortium, including the European Society for Paediatric Oncology, two imaging biobanks, and three prominent European paediatric oncology units. The project is constructed as an observational in silico study involving high-quality anonymised datasets (imaging, clinical, molecular, and genetics) for the training and validation of machine learning and multiscale algorithms. The open cloud-based platform will offer precise clinical assistance for phenotyping (diagnosis), treatment allocation (prediction), and patient endpoints (prognosis), based on the use of imaging biomarkers, tumour growth simulation, advanced visualisation of confidence scores, and machine-learning approaches. The decision support prototype will be constructed and validated on two paediatric cancers: neuroblastoma and diffuse intrinsic pontine glioma. External validation will be performed on data recruited from independent collaborative centres. Final results will be available for the scientific community at the end of the project, and ready for translation to other malignant solid tumours.


Subject(s)
Artificial Intelligence , Biomarkers/analysis , Brain Neoplasms/diagnostic imaging , Brain Neoplasms/therapy , Glioma/diagnostic imaging , Glioma/therapy , Neuroblastoma/diagnostic imaging , Neuroblastoma/therapy , Child , Cloud Computing , Decision Support Techniques , Disease Progression , Europe , Female , Humans , Male , Phenotype , Prognosis , Tumor Burden
2.
Comput Methods Programs Biomed ; 146: 37-46, 2017 Jul.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-28688488

ABSTRACT

BACKGROUND AND OBJECTIVE: To address the increasing need for collaborative endeavours within the Virtual Physiological Human (VPH) community, the VPH-Share collaborative cloud platform allows researchers to expose and share sequences of complex biomedical processing tasks in the form of computational workflows. The Taverna Workflow System is a very popular tool for orchestrating complex biomedical & bioinformatics processing tasks in the VPH community. This paper describes the VPH-Share components that support the building and execution of Taverna workflows, and explains how they interact with other VPH-Share components to improve the capabilities of the VPH-Share platform. METHODS: Taverna workflow support is delivered by the Atmosphere cloud management platform and the VPH-Share Taverna plugin. These components are explained in detail, along with the two main procedures that were developed to enable this seamless integration: workflow composition and execution. RESULTS: 1) Seamless integration of VPH-Share with other components and systems. 2) Extended range of different tools for workflows. 3) Successful integration of scientific workflows from other VPH projects. 4) Execution speed improvement for medical applications. CONCLUSION: The presented workflow integration provides VPH-Share users with a wide range of different possibilities to compose and execute workflows, such as desktop or online composition, online batch execution, multithreading, remote execution, etc. The specific advantages of each supported tool are presented, as are the roles of Atmosphere and the VPH-Share plugin within the VPH-Share project. The combination of the VPH-Share plugin and Atmosphere engenders the VPH-Share infrastructure with far more flexible, powerful and usable capabilities for the VPH-Share community. As both components can continue to evolve and improve independently, we acknowledge that further improvements are still to be developed and will be described.


Subject(s)
Cloud Computing , Computational Biology , Workflow , Software
3.
Stud Health Technol Inform ; 147: 51-61, 2009.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-19593044

ABSTRACT

In order to perform clinical investigations on integrated biomedical data sets and to predict virological and epidemiological outcome, medical experts require an IT-based collaborative environment that provides them a user-friendly space for building and executing their complex studies and workflows on largely available and high-quality data repositories. In this paper, the authors introduce such a novel collaborative working environment a so-called virtual laboratory for clinicians and medical researchers, which allows users to interactively access and browse several biomedical research databases and re-use relevant data sets within own designed experiments. Firstly, technical details on the integration of relevant data resources into the virtual laboratory infrastructure and specifically developed user interfaces are briefly explained. The second part describes research possibilities for medical scientists including potential application fields and benefits as using the virtual laboratory functionalities for a particular exemplary study.


Subject(s)
Biomedical Research , Cooperative Behavior , Databases as Topic , Systems Integration , Access to Information , Computer Simulation , Drug Resistance , HIV Infections , User-Computer Interface
4.
Stud Health Technol Inform ; 138: 188-98, 2008.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-18560121

ABSTRACT

The complete cascade from genome, proteome, metabolome, and physiome, to health forms multiscale, multiscience systems and crosses many orders of magnitude in temporal and spatial scales. The interactions between these systems create exquisite multitiered networks, with each component in nonlinear contact with many interaction partners. Understanding, quantifying, and handling this complexity is one of the biggest scientific challenges of our time. In this paper we argue that computer science in general, and Grid computing in particular, provide the language needed to study and understand these systems, and discuss a case study in decision support for HIV drug resistance treatment within the European ViroLab project.


Subject(s)
Anti-HIV Agents/therapeutic use , Computer Communication Networks/organization & administration , Decision Support Systems, Clinical , Drug Resistance, Multiple, Viral , HIV Infections/drug therapy , Medical Informatics Computing , Artificial Intelligence , Computer Systems , Cooperative Behavior , Europe , Humans , Software
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