Medical Xpress November 14, 2024
An international, multidisciplinary team of leading neuro-oncology researchers and clinicians has released new recommendations for good clinical practice—a set of guidelines that helps ensure clinical trial results are reliable, and patients are protected—regarding the use of artificial intelligence methods to more accurately diagnose, monitor and treat brain cancer patients.
The team recently published two companion policy reviews in The Lancet Oncology, on behalf of the clinically authoritative Response Assessment in Neuro-Oncology cooperative group, which is a collaboration of international experts who develop standardized criteria for evaluating treatment response in clinical trials for brain cancer.
Indiana University School of Medicine’s Spyridon Bakas is the lead author on the second policy review, which establishes guidelines for standardization, validation and good clinical practice...