OrĂ³stica, KarenMardones, FelipeBernal, YanaraMolina, SamuelOrchard, MarcosVerdugo, RicardoCarvajal-Hausdorf, DanielMarcelain, KatherineContreras, SebaArmisen, Ricardo2024-12-112024-12-112024OrĂ³stica K, Mardones F, Bernal YA, Molina S, Orchard M, Verdugo RA, Carvajal-Hausdorf D, Marcelain K, Contreras S, Armisen R. Advances in machine learning for tumour classification in cancer of unknown primary: A mini-review. Cancer Lett. 2024 Nov 28;611:217348. doi: 10.1016/j.canlet.2024.217348https://hdl.handle.net/11447/9471Cancers of unknown primary (CUP) are a heterogeneous group of aggressive metastatic cancers where standardised diagnostic techniques fail to identify the organ where it originated, resulting in a poor prognosis and resistance to treatment. Recent advances in large-scale sequencing techniques have enabled the identification of mutational signatures specific to particular tumour subtypes, even from liquid biopsy samples such as blood. This breakthrough paves the way for the development of new cost-effective diagnostic strategies. This mini-review explores recent advancements in Machine Learning (ML) and its application to tumour classification methods for CUP patients, identifying its weaknesses and strengths when classifying the tumour type. In the era of multi-omics, integrating several sources of information (e.g., imaging, molecular biomarkers, and family history) requires important theoretical advancements: increasing the dimensionality of the problem can result in lowering the predictive accuracy and robustness when data is scarce. Here, we review and discuss different architectures and strategies for incorporating cutting-edge machine learning into CUP diagnosis, aiming to bridge the gap between theory and clinical practice.enCancers of unknown primary (CUP)Diagnostic methodsMachine learning (ML)Mutational signaturesSomatic mutationsTumour classificationAdvances in machine learning for tumour classification in cancer of unknown primary: A mini-reviewArticlehttps://doi.org/10.1016/j.canlet.2024.217348