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2.
Sci Rep ; 14(1): 7136, 2024 03 26.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38531958

RESUMEN

Programmed death-ligand 1 (PD-L1) expression is currently used in the clinic to assess eligibility for immune-checkpoint inhibitors via the tumor proportion score (TPS), but its efficacy is limited by high interobserver variability. Multiple papers have presented systems for the automatic quantification of TPS, but none report on the task of determining cell-level PD-L1 expression and often reserve their evaluation to a single PD-L1 monoclonal antibody or clinical center. In this paper, we report on a deep learning algorithm for detecting PD-L1 negative and positive tumor cells at a cellular level and evaluate it on a cell-level reference standard established by six readers on a multi-centric, multi PD-L1 assay dataset. This reference standard also provides for the first time a benchmark for computer vision algorithms. In addition, in line with other papers, we also evaluate our algorithm at slide-level by measuring the agreement between the algorithm and six pathologists on TPS quantification. We find a moderately low interobserver agreement at cell-level level (mean reader-reader F1 score = 0.68) which our algorithm sits slightly under (mean reader-AI F1 score = 0.55), especially for cases from the clinical center not included in the training set. Despite this, we find good AI-pathologist agreement on quantifying TPS compared to the interobserver agreement (mean reader-reader Cohen's kappa = 0.54, 95% CI 0.26-0.81, mean reader-AI kappa = 0.49, 95% CI 0.27-0.72). In conclusion, our deep learning algorithm demonstrates promise in detecting PD-L1 expression at a cellular level and exhibits favorable agreement with pathologists in quantifying the tumor proportion score (TPS). We publicly release our models for use via the Grand-Challenge platform.


Asunto(s)
Carcinoma de Pulmón de Células no Pequeñas , Aprendizaje Profundo , Neoplasias Pulmonares , Humanos , Carcinoma de Pulmón de Células no Pequeñas/patología , Neoplasias Pulmonares/patología , Patólogos , Antígeno B7-H1/metabolismo , Inmunohistoquímica , Biomarcadores de Tumor/metabolismo
3.
NPJ Breast Cancer ; 10(1): 25, 2024 Mar 29.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38553444

RESUMEN

Operable triple-negative breast cancer (TNBC) has a higher risk of recurrence and death compared to other subtypes. Tumor size and nodal status are the primary clinical factors used to guide systemic treatment, while biomarkers of proliferation have not demonstrated value. Recent studies suggest that subsets of TNBC have a favorable prognosis, even without systemic therapy. We evaluated the association of fully automated mitotic spindle hotspot (AMSH) counts with recurrence-free (RFS) and overall survival (OS) in two separate cohorts of patients with early-stage TNBC who did not receive systemic therapy. AMSH counts were obtained from areas with the highest mitotic density in digitized whole slide images processed with a convolutional neural network trained to detect mitoses. In 140 patients from the Mayo Clinic TNBC cohort, AMSH counts were significantly associated with RFS and OS in a multivariable model controlling for nodal status, tumor size, and tumor-infiltrating lymphocytes (TILs) (p < 0.0001). For every 10-point increase in AMSH counts, there was a 16% increase in the risk of an RFS event (HR 1.16, 95% CI 1.08-1.25), and a 7% increase in the risk of death (HR 1.07, 95% CI 1.00-1.14). We corroborated these findings in a separate cohort of systemically untreated TNBC patients from Radboud UMC in the Netherlands. Our findings suggest that AMSH counts offer valuable prognostic information in patients with early-stage TNBC who did not receive systemic therapy, independent of tumor size, nodal status, and TILs. If further validated, AMSH counts could help inform future systemic therapy de-escalation strategies.

4.
Comput Biol Med ; 170: 108018, 2024 Mar.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38281317

RESUMEN

In histopathology practice, scanners, tissue processing, staining, and image acquisition protocols vary from center to center, resulting in subtle variations in images. Vanilla convolutional neural networks are sensitive to such domain shifts. Data augmentation is a popular way to improve domain generalization. Currently, state-of-the-art domain generalization in computational pathology is achieved using a manually curated set of augmentation transforms. However, manual tuning of augmentation parameters is time-consuming and can lead to sub-optimal generalization performance. Meta-learning frameworks can provide efficient ways to find optimal training hyper-parameters, including data augmentation. In this study, we hypothesize that an automated search of augmentation hyper-parameters can provide superior generalization performance and reduce experimental optimization time. We select four state-of-the-art automatic augmentation methods from general computer vision and investigate their capacity to improve domain generalization in histopathology. We analyze their performance on data from 25 centers across two different tasks: tumor metastasis detection in lymph nodes and breast cancer tissue type classification. On tumor metastasis detection, most automatic augmentation methods achieve comparable performance to state-of-the-art manual augmentation. On breast cancer tissue type classification, the leading automatic augmentation method significantly outperforms state-of-the-art manual data augmentation.


Asunto(s)
Neoplasias de la Mama , Aprendizaje Profundo , Humanos , Femenino , Procesamiento de Imagen Asistido por Computador/métodos , Redes Neurales de la Computación , Mama
5.
Med Image Anal ; 93: 103088, 2024 Apr.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38228075

RESUMEN

The ability to detect anomalies, i.e. anything not seen during training or out-of-distribution (OOD), in medical imaging applications is essential for successfully deploying machine learning systems. Filtering out OOD data using unsupervised learning is especially promising because it does not require costly annotations. A new class of models called AnoDDPMs, based on denoising diffusion probabilistic models (DDPMs), has recently achieved significant progress in unsupervised OOD detection. This work provides a benchmark for unsupervised OOD detection methods in digital pathology. By leveraging fast sampling techniques, we apply AnoDDPM on a large enough scale for whole-slide image analysis on the complete test set of the Camelyon16 challenge. Based on ROC analysis, we show that AnoDDPMs can detect OOD data with an AUC of up to 94.13 and 86.93 on two patch-level OOD detection tasks, outperforming the other unsupervised methods. We observe that AnoDDPMs alter the semantic properties of inputs, replacing anomalous data with more benign-looking tissue. Furthermore, we highlight the flexibility of AnoDDPM towards different information bottlenecks by evaluating reconstruction errors for inputs with different signal-to-noise ratios. While there is still a significant performance gap with fully supervised learning, AnoDDPMs show considerable promise in the field of OOD detection in digital pathology.


Asunto(s)
Benchmarking , Procesamiento de Imagen Asistido por Computador , Humanos , Difusión , Aprendizaje Automático , Modelos Estadísticos
6.
United European Gastroenterol J ; 12(3): 299-308, 2024 Apr.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38193866

RESUMEN

BACKGROUND: The International Collaboration on Cancer Reporting proposes histological tumour type, lymphovascular invasion, tumour grade, perineural invasion, extent, and dimensions of invasion as risk factors for lymph node metastases and tumour progression in completely endoscopically resected pT1 colorectal cancer (CRC). OBJECTIVE: The aim of the study was to propose a predictive and reliable score to optimise the clinical management of endoscopically resected pT1 CRC patients. METHODS: This multi-centric, retrospective International Budding Consortium (IBC) study included an international pT1 CRC cohort of 565 patients. All cases were reviewed by eight expert gastrointestinal pathologists. All risk factors were reported according to international guidelines. Tumour budding and immune response (CD8+ T-cells) were assessed with automated models using artificial intelligence. We used the information on risk factors and least absolute shrinkage and selection operator logistic regression to develop a prediction model and generate a score to predict the occurrence of lymph node metastasis or cancer recurrence. RESULTS: The IBC prediction score included the following parameters: lymphovascular invasion, tumour buds, infiltration depth and tumour grade. The score has an acceptable discrimination power (area under the curve of 0.68 [95% confidence intervals (CI) 0.61-0.75]; 0.64 [95% CI 0.57-0.71] after internal validation). At a cut-off of 6.8 points to discriminate high-and low-risk patients, the score had a sensitivity and specificity of 0.9 [95% CI 0.8-0.95] and 0.26 [95% 0.22, 0.3], respectively. CONCLUSION: The IBC score is based on well-established risk factors and is a promising tool with clinical utility to support the management of pT1 CRC patients.


Asunto(s)
Inteligencia Artificial , Neoplasias Colorrectales , Humanos , Estudios Retrospectivos , Metástasis Linfática , Neoplasias Colorrectales/cirugía , Neoplasias Colorrectales/patología , Recurrencia Local de Neoplasia/epidemiología
7.
Commun Med (Lond) ; 4(1): 5, 2024 Jan 05.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38182879

RESUMEN

BACKGROUND: Tertiary lymphoid structures (TLSs) are dense accumulations of lymphocytes in inflamed peripheral tissues, including cancer, and are associated with improved survival and response to immunotherapy in various solid tumors. Histological TLS quantification has been proposed as a novel predictive and prognostic biomarker, but lack of standardized methods of TLS characterization hampers assessment of TLS densities across different patients, diseases, and clinical centers. METHODS: We introduce an approach based on HookNet-TLS, a multi-resolution deep learning model, for automated and unbiased TLS quantification and identification of germinal centers in routine hematoxylin and eosin stained digital pathology slides. We developed HookNet-TLS using n = 1019 manually annotated TCGA slides from clear cell renal cell carcinoma, muscle-invasive bladder cancer, and lung squamous cell carcinoma. RESULTS: Here we show that HookNet-TLS automates TLS quantification across multiple cancer types achieving human-level performance and demonstrates prognostic associations similar to visual assessment. CONCLUSIONS: HookNet-TLS has the potential to be used as a tool for objective quantification of TLS in routine H&E digital pathology slides. We make HookNet-TLS publicly available to promote its use in research.


Tertiary lymphoid structures (TLS) are dense accumulations of immune cells within a cancer. They have been associated with patient survival and treatment effectiveness. Quantification of TLS in cancer microscopy images may therefore aid clinical decision-making. However, no consensus for defining TLS in such images exists leading to inconsistent and variable findings across different labs and studies. We developed a computational tool for automated and objective TLS quantification in cancer images. The tool, called HookNet-TLS, integrates information from multiple image resolutions, which resembles the process of how a pathologist would identify these structures using a microscope. HookNet-TLS detected TLS similarly to trained researchers in three different tumor types. We provided access to HookNet-TLS to facilitate its development and use for TLS assessment in clinical decision-making and research into the role of TLS in cancer.

8.
Sci Rep ; 14(1): 1497, 2024 01 17.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38233535

RESUMEN

Whole-mount sectioning is a technique in histopathology where a full slice of tissue, such as a transversal cross-section of a prostate specimen, is prepared on a large microscope slide without further sectioning into smaller fragments. Although this technique can offer improved correlation with pre-operative imaging and is paramount for multimodal research, it is not commonly employed due to its technical difficulty, associated cost and cumbersome integration in (digital) pathology workflows. In this work, we present a computational tool named PythoStitcher which reconstructs artificial whole-mount sections from digitized tissue fragments, thereby bringing the benefits of whole-mount sections to pathology labs currently unable to employ this technique. Our proposed algorithm consists of a multi-step approach where it (i) automatically determines how fragments need to be reassembled, (ii) iteratively optimizes the stitch using a genetic algorithm and (iii) efficiently reconstructs the final artificial whole-mount section on full resolution (0.25 µm/pixel). PythoStitcher was validated on a total of 198 cases spanning five datasets with a varying number of tissue fragments originating from different organs from multiple centers. PythoStitcher successfully reconstructed the whole-mount section in 86-100% of cases for a given dataset with a residual registration mismatch of 0.65-2.76 mm on automatically selected landmarks. It is expected that our algorithm can aid pathology labs unable to employ whole-mount sectioning through faster clinical case evaluation and improved radiology-pathology correlation workflows.


Asunto(s)
Algoritmos , Diagnóstico por Imagen , Procesamiento de Imagen Asistido por Computador , Humanos
9.
Am J Transplant ; 24(3): 350-361, 2024 Mar.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37931753

RESUMEN

The XVIth Banff Meeting for Allograft Pathology was held in Banff, Alberta, Canada, from September 19 to 23, 2022, as a joint meeting with the Canadian Society of Transplantation. In addition to a key focus on the impact of microvascular inflammation and biopsy-based transcript analysis on the Banff Classification, further sessions were devoted to other aspects of kidney transplant pathology, in particular T cell-mediated rejection, activity and chronicity indices, digital pathology, xenotransplantation, clinical trials, and surrogate endpoints. Although the output of these sessions has not led to any changes in the classification, the key role of Banff Working Groups in phrasing unanswered questions, and coordinating and disseminating results of investigations addressing these unanswered questions was emphasized. This paper summarizes the key Banff Meeting 2022 sessions not covered in the Banff Kidney Meeting 2022 Report paper and also provides an update on other Banff Working Group activities relevant to kidney allografts.


Asunto(s)
Trasplante de Riñón , Canadá , Rechazo de Injerto/etiología , Rechazo de Injerto/patología , Riñón/patología , Aloinjertos
10.
IEEE J Biomed Health Inform ; 28(3): 1161-1172, 2024 Mar.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37878422

RESUMEN

We introduce LYSTO, the Lymphocyte Assessment Hackathon, which was held in conjunction with the MICCAI 2019 Conference in Shenzhen (China). The competition required participants to automatically assess the number of lymphocytes, in particular T-cells, in images of colon, breast, and prostate cancer stained with CD3 and CD8 immunohistochemistry. Differently from other challenges setup in medical image analysis, LYSTO participants were solely given a few hours to address this problem. In this paper, we describe the goal and the multi-phase organization of the hackathon; we describe the proposed methods and the on-site results. Additionally, we present post-competition results where we show how the presented methods perform on an independent set of lung cancer slides, which was not part of the initial competition, as well as a comparison on lymphocyte assessment between presented methods and a panel of pathologists. We show that some of the participants were capable to achieve pathologist-level performance at lymphocyte assessment. After the hackathon, LYSTO was left as a lightweight plug-and-play benchmark dataset on grand-challenge website, together with an automatic evaluation platform.


Asunto(s)
Benchmarking , Neoplasias de la Próstata , Masculino , Humanos , Linfocitos , Mama , China
11.
J Med Imaging (Bellingham) ; 10(6): 067501, 2023 Nov.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38074626

RESUMEN

Significance: Although the registration of restained sections allows nucleus-level alignment that enables a direct analysis of interacting biomarkers, consecutive sections only allow the transfer of region-level annotations. The latter can be achieved at low computational cost using coarser image resolutions. Purpose: In digital histopathology, virtual multistaining is important for diagnosis and biomarker research. Additionally, it provides accurate ground truth for various deep-learning tasks. Virtual multistaining can be obtained using different stains for consecutive sections or by restaining the same section. Both approaches require image registration to compensate for tissue deformations, but little attention has been devoted to comparing their accuracy. Approach: We compared affine and deformable variational image registration of consecutive and restained sections and analyzed the effect of the image resolution that influences accuracy and required computational resources. The registration was applied to the automatic nonrigid histological image registration (ANHIR) challenge data (230 consecutive slide pairs) and the hyperparameters were determined. Then without changing the parameters, the registration was applied to a newly published hybrid dataset of restained and consecutive sections (HyReCo, 86 slide pairs, 5404 landmarks). Results: We obtain a median landmark error after registration of 6.5 µm (HyReCo) and 24.1 µm (ANHIR) between consecutive sections. Between restained sections, the median registration error is 2.2 and 0.9 µm in the two subsets of the HyReCo dataset. We observe that deformable registration leads to lower landmark errors than affine registration in both cases (p<0.001), though the effect is smaller in restained sections. Conclusion: Deformable registration of consecutive and restained sections is a valuable tool for the joint analysis of different stains.

12.
Breast Cancer Res ; 25(1): 142, 2023 11 13.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37957667

RESUMEN

BACKGROUND: Invasive breast cancer patients are increasingly being treated with neoadjuvant chemotherapy; however, only a fraction of the patients respond to it completely. To prevent overtreatment, there is an urgent need for biomarkers to predict treatment response before administering the therapy. METHODS: In this retrospective study, we developed hypothesis-driven interpretable biomarkers based on deep learning, to predict the pathological complete response (pCR, i.e., the absence of tumor cells in the surgical resection specimens) to neoadjuvant chemotherapy solely using digital pathology H&E images of pre-treatment breast biopsies. Our approach consists of two steps: First, we use deep learning to characterize aspects of the tumor micro-environment by detecting mitoses and segmenting tissue into several morphology compartments including tumor, lymphocytes and stroma. Second, we derive computational biomarkers from the segmentation and detection output to encode slide-level relationships of components of the tumor microenvironment, such as tumor and mitoses, stroma, and tumor infiltrating lymphocytes (TILs). RESULTS: We developed and evaluated our method on slides from n = 721 patients from three European medical centers with triple-negative and Luminal B breast cancers and performed external independent validation on n = 126 patients from a public dataset. We report the predictive value of the investigated biomarkers for predicting pCR with areas under the receiver operating characteristic curve between 0.66 and 0.88 across the tested cohorts. CONCLUSION: The proposed computational biomarkers predict pCR, but will require more evaluation and finetuning for clinical application. Our results further corroborate the potential role of deep learning to automate TILs quantification, and their predictive value in breast cancer neoadjuvant treatment planning, along with automated mitoses quantification. We made our method publicly available to extract segmentation-based biomarkers for research purposes.


Asunto(s)
Neoplasias de la Mama , Aprendizaje Profundo , Humanos , Femenino , Neoplasias de la Mama/diagnóstico , Neoplasias de la Mama/tratamiento farmacológico , Neoplasias de la Mama/patología , Terapia Neoadyuvante/métodos , Estudios Retrospectivos , Protocolos de Quimioterapia Combinada Antineoplásica/uso terapéutico , Linfocitos Infiltrantes de Tumor/patología , Biopsia , Biomarcadores , Pronóstico , Microambiente Tumoral
13.
Transpl Int ; 36: 11783, 2023.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37908675

RESUMEN

The Banff Digital Pathology Working Group (DPWG) was established with the goal to establish a digital pathology repository; develop, validate, and share models for image analysis; and foster collaborations using regular videoconferencing. During the calls, a variety of artificial intelligence (AI)-based support systems for transplantation pathology were presented. Potential collaborations in a competition/trial on AI applied to kidney transplant specimens, including the DIAGGRAFT challenge (staining of biopsies at multiple institutions, pathologists' visual assessment, and development and validation of new and pre-existing Banff scoring algorithms), were also discussed. To determine the next steps, a survey was conducted, primarily focusing on the feasibility of establishing a digital pathology repository and identifying potential hosts. Sixteen of the 35 respondents (46%) had access to a server hosting a digital pathology repository, with 2 respondents that could serve as a potential host at no cost to the DPWG. The 16 digital pathology repositories collected specimens from various organs, with the largest constituent being kidney (n = 12,870 specimens). A DPWG pilot digital pathology repository was established, and there are plans for a competition/trial with the DIAGGRAFT project. Utilizing existing resources and previously established models, the Banff DPWG is establishing new resources for the Banff community.


Asunto(s)
Inteligencia Artificial , Trasplante de Riñón , Humanos , Algoritmos , Riñón/patología
14.
Front Public Health ; 11: 1196596, 2023.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37822534

RESUMEN

Digital health technologies have been in use for many years in a wide spectrum of healthcare scenarios. This narrative review outlines the current use and the future strategies and significance of digital health technologies in modern healthcare applications. It covers the current state of the scientific field (delineating major strengths, limitations, and applications) and envisions the future impact of relevant emerging key technologies. Furthermore, we attempt to provide recommendations for innovative approaches that would accelerate and benefit the research, translation and utilization of digital health technologies.


Asunto(s)
Tecnología Biomédica , Atención a la Salud
15.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37831571

RESUMEN

Many inherently ambiguous tasks in medical imaging suffer from inter-observer variability, resulting in a reference standard defined by a distribution of labels with high variance. Training only on a consensus or majority vote label, as is common in medical imaging, discards valuable information on uncertainty amongst a panel of experts. In this work, we propose to train on the full label distribution to predict the uncertainty within a panel of experts and the most likely ground-truth label. To do so, we propose a new stochastic classification framework based on the conditional variational auto-encoder, which we refer to as the Latent Doctor Model (LDM). In an extensive comparative analysis, we compare the LDM with a model trained on the majority vote label and other methods capable of learning a distribution of labels. We show that the LDM is able to reproduce the reference-standard distribution significantly better than the majority vote baseline. Compared to the other baseline methods, we demonstrate that the LDM performs best at modeling the label distribution and its corresponding uncertainty in two prostate tumor grading tasks. Furthermore, we show competitive performance of the LDM with the more computationally demanding deep ensembles on a tumor budding classification task.

16.
Oncogene ; 42(38): 2816-2827, 2023 09.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37587332

RESUMEN

Computational pathology (CPath) algorithms detect, segment or classify cancer in whole slide images, approaching or even exceeding the accuracy of pathologists. Challenges have to be overcome before these algorithms can be used in practice. We therefore aim to explore international perspectives on the future role of CPath in oncological pathology by focusing on opinions and first experiences regarding barriers and facilitators. We conducted an international explorative eSurvey and semi-structured interviews with pathologists utilizing an implementation framework to classify potential influencing factors. The eSurvey results showed remarkable variation in opinions regarding attitude, understandability and validation of CPath. Interview results showed that barriers focused on the quality of available evidence, while most facilitators concerned strengths of CPath. A lack of consensus was present for multiple factors, such as the determination of sufficient validation using CPath, the preferred function of CPath within the digital workflow and the timing of CPath introduction in pathology education. The diversity in opinions illustrates variety in influencing factors in CPath adoption. A next step would be to quantitatively determine important factors for adoption and initiate validation studies. Both should include clear case descriptions and be conducted among a more homogenous panel of pathologists based on sub specialization.


Asunto(s)
Oncología Médica , Patólogos , Humanos , Algoritmos
17.
Med Image Anal ; 88: 102881, 2023 08.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37437452

RESUMEN

Current hardware limitations make it impossible to train convolutional neural networks on gigapixel image inputs directly. Recent developments in weakly supervised learning, such as attention-gated multiple instance learning, have shown promising results, but often use multi-stage or patch-wise training strategies risking suboptimal feature extraction, which can negatively impact performance. In this paper, we propose to train a ResNet-34 encoder with an attention-gated classification head in an end-to-end fashion, which we call StreamingCLAM, using a streaming implementation of convolutional layers. This allows us to train end-to-end on 4-gigapixel microscopic images using only slide-level labels. We achieve a mean area under the receiver operating characteristic curve of 0.9757 for metastatic breast cancer detection (CAMELYON16), close to fully supervised approaches using pixel-level annotations. Our model can also detect MYC-gene translocation in histologic slides of diffuse large B-cell lymphoma, achieving a mean area under the ROC curve of 0.8259. Furthermore, we show that our model offers a degree of interpretability through the attention mechanism.


Asunto(s)
Neoplasias de la Mama , Redes Neurales de la Computación , Humanos , Femenino , Neoplasias de la Mama/diagnóstico por imagen , Neoplasias de la Mama/patología , Curva ROC
18.
Cancers (Basel) ; 15(9)2023 May 08.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37174121

RESUMEN

(1) Background: Histopathological assessment of Wilms tumors (WT) is crucial for risk group classification to guide postoperative stratification in chemotherapy pre-treated WT cases. However, due to the heterogeneous nature of the tumor, significant interobserver variation between pathologists in WT diagnosis has been observed, potentially leading to misclassification and suboptimal treatment. We investigated whether artificial intelligence (AI) can contribute to accurate and reproducible histopathological assessment of WT through recognition of individual histopathological tumor components. (2) Methods: We assessed the performance of a deep learning-based AI system in quantifying WT components in hematoxylin and eosin-stained slides by calculating the Sørensen-Dice coefficient for fifteen predefined renal tissue components, including six tumor-related components. We trained the AI system using multiclass annotations from 72 whole-slide images of patients diagnosed with WT. (3) Results: The overall Dice coefficient for all fifteen tissue components was 0.85 and for the six tumor-related components was 0.79. Tumor segmentation worked best to reliably identify necrosis (Dice coefficient 0.98) and blastema (Dice coefficient 0.82). (4) Conclusions: Accurate histopathological classification of WT may be feasible using a digital pathology-based AI system in a national cohort of WT patients.

19.
Mod Pathol ; 36(9): 100233, 2023 09.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37257824

RESUMEN

Tumor budding (TB), the presence of single cells or small clusters of up to 4 tumor cells at the invasive front of colorectal cancer (CRC), is a proven risk factor for adverse outcomes. International definitions are necessary to reduce interobserver variability. According to the current international guidelines, hotspots at the invasive front should be counted in hematoxylin and eosin (H&E)-stained slides. This is time-consuming and prone to interobserver variability; therefore, there is a need for computer-aided diagnosis solutions. In this study, we report an artificial intelligence-based method for detecting TB in H&E-stained whole slide images. We propose a fully automated pipeline to identify the tumor border, detect tumor buds, characterize them based on the number of tumor cells, and produce a TB density map to identify the TB hotspot. The method outputs the TB count in the hotspot as a computational biomarker. We show that the proposed automated TB detection workflow performs on par with a panel of 5 pathologists at detecting tumor buds and that the hotspot-based TB count is an independent prognosticator in both the univariate and the multivariate analysis, validated on a cohort of n = 981 patients with CRC. Computer-aided detection of tumor buds based on deep learning can perform on par with expert pathologists for the detection and quantification of tumor buds in H&E-stained CRC histopathology slides, strongly facilitating the introduction of budding as an independent prognosticator in clinical routine and clinical trials.


Asunto(s)
Inteligencia Artificial , Neoplasias Colorrectales , Humanos , Hematoxilina , Eosina Amarillenta-(YS) , Neoplasias Colorrectales/diagnóstico , Neoplasias Colorrectales/patología , Diagnóstico por Computador
20.
Sci Rep ; 13(1): 8398, 2023 05 24.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37225743

RESUMEN

In colorectal cancer (CRC), artificial intelligence (AI) can alleviate the laborious task of characterization and reporting on resected biopsies, including polyps, the numbers of which are increasing as a result of CRC population screening programs ongoing in many countries all around the globe. Here, we present an approach to address two major challenges in the automated assessment of CRC histopathology whole-slide images. We present an AI-based method to segment multiple ([Formula: see text]) tissue compartments in the H &E-stained whole-slide image, which provides a different, more perceptible picture of tissue morphology and composition. We test and compare a panel of state-of-the-art loss functions available for segmentation models, and provide indications about their use in histopathology image segmentation, based on the analysis of (a) a multi-centric cohort of CRC cases from five medical centers in the Netherlands and Germany, and (b) two publicly available datasets on segmentation in CRC. We used the best performing AI model as the basis for a computer-aided diagnosis system that classifies colon biopsies into four main categories that are relevant pathologically. We report the performance of this system on an independent cohort of more than 1000 patients. The results show that with a good segmentation network as a base, a tool can be developed which can support pathologists in the risk stratification of colorectal cancer patients, among other possible uses. We have made the segmentation model available for research use on https://grand-challenge.org/algorithms/colon-tissue-segmentation/ .


Asunto(s)
Aprendizaje Profundo , Neoplasias , Humanos , Inteligencia Artificial , Semántica , Patólogos
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