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Retrieval-Augmented Generation in Oncology: Promises, Pitfalls, and Early Applications

2026·0 Zitationen·AI in Precision Oncology
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0

Zitationen

10

Autoren

2026

Jahr

Abstract

Retrieval-augmented generation (RAG) is rapidly emerging as a transformative paradigm for large language models (LLMs), especially in high-stakes domains like oncology that demand precision, factual grounding, and up-to-date knowledge. By pairing LLMs with external knowledge repositories, RAG systems explicitly ground model outputs in relevant retrieved documents, helping to reduce hallucinations and ensure responses reflect current evidence. In oncology, where clinical knowledge evolves continually with new research and drug approvals, RAG offers a way to integrate the latest data (e.g., trial results, guidelines, genomic databases) into decision-making. This review synthesizes the technical foundations of RAG, including its architecture and key components, and examines current applications in oncology such as clinical decision support, patient education, radiology reporting, pathology analysis, and genomics-driven precision medicine. We highlight recent studies that demonstrate RAG’s potential—for instance, improving treatment recommendations by incorporating genetic profiles and literature, and enhancing diagnostic accuracy by integrating guidelines. We also discuss emerging developments like multimodal RAG (combining text with imaging or other data), ensemble model approaches, and new explainability tools that trace model outputs to sources. Finally, we critically analyze the limitations and challenges of deploying RAG in healthcare, including computational costs, retrieval errors, noise or conflicts in retrieved information, and ethical and regulatory considerations. While RAG-based systems show promise in augmenting oncologists’ expertise with timely knowledge, careful implementation, high-quality curation of knowledge bases, and human oversight will be crucial for safe and effective adoption in clinical practice.

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