Advanced Ultrasound in Diagnosis and Therapy ›› 2025, Vol. 9 ›› Issue (4): 388-408.doi: 10.26599/AUDT.2025.250101

Previous Articles     Next Articles

Multimodal Ultrasound Radiomics in Liver Disease: Current Status and Future Directions

Zhong Xiana, Xie Xiaoyana,*()   

  1. aDepartment of Medical Ultrasonics, Institute of Diagnostic and Interventional Ultrasound, The First Affiliated Hospital of Sun Yat-sen University, Guangzhou, China
  • Received:2025-10-15 Revised:2025-10-28 Accepted:2025-11-05 Online:2025-12-30 Published:2025-11-06
  • Contact: Department of Medical Ultrasonics, Institute of Diagnostic and Interventional Ultrasound, The First Affiliated Hospital of Sun Yat-sen University, Guangzhou 510080, China (Xiaoyan Xie), e-mail: xiexyan@mail.sysu.edu.cn (XY X).,

Abstract:

Multimodal ultrasound, including B-mode imaging, contrast-enhanced ultrasound (CEUS), and ultrasound-based elastography, has demonstrated significant value in evaluating both diffuse liver diseases such as fibrosis and steatosis, and focal liver lesions such as hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC). Radiomics, including both handcrafted radiomics and deep learning approaches, has emerged as a promising strategy to enhance ultrasound-based liver disease assessment. Recent studies have applied radiomics across multimodal ultrasound, achieving notable success in grading fatty liver disease, staging fibrosis, and improving diagnosis, risk stratification, and prognostic prediction in HCC. Multimodal ultrasound provides complementary information on liver morphology, perfusion, and stiffness, while fusion strategies further enhance diagnostic accuracy and robustness. Future efforts should focus on standardized, large-scale multicenter validation, methodological improvements in multimodal integration, and the incorporation of explainable artificial intelligence to support clinical translation. Ultimately, despite ongoing challenges related to data heterogeneity, reproducibility, interpretability, and clinical validation, multimodal ultrasound radiomics holds strong promise for noninvasive, individualized, and clinically meaningful liver disease management.

Key words: Handcrafted radiomics; Deep learning; Contrast-enhanced ultrasound; Shear wave elastography; Liver disease