Abstract

Tremendous scientific and technological achievements have been revolutionizing the current medical era, changing the way in which physicians practice their profession and deliver healthcare provisions. This is due to the convergence of various advancements related to digitalization and the use of information and communication technologies (ICTs)—ranging from the internet of things (IoT) and the internet of medical things (IoMT) to the fields of robotics, virtual and augmented reality, and massively parallel and cloud computing. Further progress has been made in the fields of addictive manufacturing and three-dimensional (3D) printing, sophisticated statistical tools such as big data visualization and analytics (BDVA) and artificial intelligence (AI), the use of mobile and smartphone applications (apps), remote monitoring and wearable sensors, and e-learning, among others. Within this new conceptual framework, big data represents a massive set of data characterized by different properties and features. These can be categorized both from a quantitative and qualitative standpoint, and include data generated from wet-lab and microarrays (molecular big data), databases and registries (clinical/computational big data), imaging techniques (such as radiomics, imaging big data) and web searches (the so-called infodemiology, digital big data). The present review aims to show how big and smart data can revolutionize gynecology by shedding light on female reproductive health, both in terms of physiology and pathophysiology. More specifically, they appear to have potential uses in the field of gynecology to increase its accuracy and precision, stratify patients, provide opportunities for personalized treatment options rather than delivering a package of “one-size-fits-it-all” healthcare management provisions, and enhance its effectiveness at each stage (health promotion, prevention, diagnosis, prognosis, and therapeutics).

Highlights

  • Clalit Health Service, Akko, Azrieli Faculty of Medicine, Bar-Ilan University, Safed 13100, Israel; Department of Industrial Engineering, Federal University of Rio Grande do Sul, Laboratory for Industrial and Applied Mathematics (LIAM), Department of Mathematics and Statistics, Abstract: Tremendous scientific and technological achievements have been revolutionizing the current medical era, changing the way in which physicians practice their profession and deliver healthcare provisions

  • Tremendous scientific and technological achievements have been revolutionizing the current medical era, shaping the way in which physicians practice their profession and deliver healthcare provisions. This is due to the convergence of various advancements related to digitalization and the use of information and communication technologies (ICTs)—ranging from the internet of things (IoT) and the internet of medical things (IoMT)

  • Further progress has been made in the fields of addictive manufacturing and three-dimensional (3D) printing, sophisticated statistical tools such as big data visualization and analytics (BDVA) and artificial intelligence (AI), the use of mobile and smartphone applications, remote monitoring and wearable sensors, and e-learning, among others

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Summary

Theoretical Background

Tremendous scientific and technological achievements have been revolutionizing the current medical era, shaping the way in which physicians practice their profession and deliver healthcare provisions. Other drivers of and catalysts for innovation are represented by developments in the fields of P6 medicine (where the 6 Ps stand for personalized, predictive, preventive, participatory, psycho-cognitive, and public), nanomedicine, molecular medicine, and nanotherapy—including the use of new nano(bio)technological materials, and genetic, genomic, and post-genomic engineering and editing [1] All these profound changes characterize the so-called “disruptive era” (Figure 1) [2], which is dramatically impacting all medical specializations—including gynecology. Precision and predictive gynecology (which implies the customizing, tailoring, and individualizing of healthcare provisions related to gynecology, based on the individual features of each patient) Within this new conceptual framework [6], big data represents a massive set of data, characterized by different properties and features.

An overview of the kinds
The Aims of the Present Integrative Review
Gynecology and OMICS Data
Patient Centered Results for Uterine Fibroids
An Overview of Use of Big Data in the Field of Gynecology
Pitfalls and Limitations of Big Data
Areas for Future Research
Findings
10. Conclusions
Full Text
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