Available online 25 February 2025
Breast cancer is one of the most common types of cancer affecting women worldwide. Artificial intelligence (AI) is transforming breast cancer imaging by enhancing diagnostic capabilities across multiple imaging modalities including mammography, digital breast tomosynthesis, ultrasound, magnetic resonance imaging, and nuclear medicines techniques. AI is being applied to diverse tasks such as breast lesion detection and classification, risk stratification, molecular subtyping, gene mutation status prediction, and treatment response assessment, with emerging research demonstrating performance levels comparable to or potentially exceeding those of radiologists. The large foundation models are showing remarkable potential in different breast cancer imaging tasks. Self-supervised learning gives an insight into data inherent correlation, and federated learning is an alternative way to maintain data privacy. While promising results have been obtained so far, data standardization from source, large-scale annotated multimodal datasets, and extensive prospective clinical trials are still needed to fully explore and validate deep learning's clinical utility and address the legal and ethical considerations, which will ultimately determine its widespread adoption in breast cancer care. We hereby provide a review of the most up-to-date knowledge on AI in breast cancer imaging.
© 2025 The Authors. Published by Elsevier Inc.
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