Tissue perfusion plays a critical role in oncology. Growth and migration of cancerous cells requires proliferation of networks of new blood vessels through the process of tumor angiogenesis. Many imaging technologies developed recently attempt to measure characteristics pertaining to the passage of fluid through blood vessels, thereby providing a noninvasive means for cancer detection, as well as treatment prognostication, prediction, and monitoring. However, because these techniques require a sequence of successive imaging scans under administration of intravenous imaging tracers, the quality of the resulting perfusion data depends on the acquisition protocol. In this paper, we explain how to infer stability for stochastic curve estimation. The topic is motivated by two recent attempts to determine stable acquisition durations for acquiring perfusion characteristics using dynamic computed tomography, wherein inference used inappropriate statistical methods. Notably, when appropriate statistical techniques are used, the resulting conclusions deviate substantially from those previously reported in the literature.
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This is the first time for us to submit a manuscript to Cancer Informatics. We thank the peer reviewers for their insightful comments, which have improved our manuscript markedly. We were pleased to find that the staff were extremely helpful and kept us informed of the progress of the submission step-by-step. Our experience with Cancer Informatics has been tremendous. Thank you very much!
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