Biochemia Medica, Vol. 30 No. 1, 2020.
Review article
https://doi.org/10.11613/BM.2020.010501
Integrated diagnostics: the future of laboratory medicine?
Giuseppe Lippi
orcid.org/0000-0001-9523-9054
; Section of Clinical Biochemistry, University of Verona, Verona, Italy
Mario Plebani
; Department of Laboratory Medicine, University Hospital of Padova, Padova, Italy
Abstract
The current scenario of in vitro and in vivo diagnostics can be summarized using the “silo metaphor”, where laboratory medicine, pathology and radiology are three conceptually separated diagnostic disciplines, which will increasingly share many comparable features. The substantial progresses in our understanding of biochemical-biological interplays that characterize many human diseases, coupled with extraordinary technical advances, are now generating important multidisciplinary convergences, leading the way to a new frontier, called integrated diagnostics. This new discipline, which is currently defined as convergence of imaging, pathology and laboratory tests with advanced information technology, has an enormous potential for revolutionizing diagnosis and therapeutic management of human diseases, including those causing the largest number of worldwide deaths (i.e. cardiovascular disease, cancer and infectious diseases). However, some important drawbacks should be overcome, mostly represented
by insufficient information technology infrastructures, costs and enormous volume of different information that will be integrated and delivered. To overcome these hurdles, some specific strategies should be defined and implemented, such as planning major integration of exiting information systems or developing innovative ones, combining bioinformatics and imaging informatics, using health technology assessment for assessing cost and benefits, providing interpretative comments in integrated reports, developing and using expert systems and neural networks, overcoming cultural and political boundaries for generating multidisciplinary teams and integrated diagnostic algorithms.
Keywords
integrated diagnostics; laboratory medicine; pathology; radiology
Hrčak ID:
234032
URI
Publication date:
15.2.2020.
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