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1.
IEEE J Biomed Health Inform ; 25(2): 307-314, 2021 02.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33347418

ABSTRACT

Digital slide images produced from routine diagnostic histopathological preparations suffer from variation arising at every step of the processing pipeline. Typically, pathologists compensate for such variation using expert knowledge and experience, which is difficult to replicate in automated solutions. The extent to which inconsistencies affect image analysis is explored in this work, examining in detail, the results from a previously published algorithm automating the generation of tumor:stroma ratio (TSR) in colorectal clinical trial datasets. One dataset consisting of 2,211 cases and 106,268 expert-labelled images is used to identify quality issues, by visually inspecting cases where algorithm-pathologist agreement is lowest. Twelve categories are identified and used to analyze pathologist-algorithm agreement in relation to these categories. Of the 2,211 cases, 701 were found to be free from any image quality issues. Algorithm performance was then assessed, comparing pathologist agreement with image quality classification. It was found that agreement was lowest on poorly differentiated tissue, with a mean TSR difference of 0.25 (sd = 0.24). Removing images that contained quality issues increased accuracy from 80% to 83%, at the expense of reducing the dataset to 33,736 images (32%). Training the algorithm on the optimized dataset, prior to testing on all images saw a decrease in accuracy of 4%, indicating that the optimized dataset did not contain enough variation to generate a fully representative model. The results provide an in-depth perspective on image quality, highlighting the importance of the effects on downstream image analysis.


Subject(s)
Algorithms , Image Processing, Computer-Assisted , Humans , Microscopy , Quality Control
2.
J Pathol Inform ; 11: 17, 2020.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33033654

ABSTRACT

Pathology services are facing pressures due to the COVID-19 pandemic. Digital pathology has the capability to meet some of these unprecedented challenges by allowing remote diagnoses to be made at home, during periods of social distancing or self-isolation. However, while digital pathology allows diagnoses to be made on standard computer screens, unregulated home environments may not be conducive for optimal viewing conditions. There is also a paucity of experimental evidence available to support the minimum display requirements for digital pathology. This study presents a Point-of-Use Quality Assurance (POUQA) tool for remote assessment of viewing conditions for reporting digital pathology slides. The tool is a psychophysical test combining previous work from successfully implemented quality assurance tools in both pathology and radiology to provide a minimally intrusive display screen validation task, before viewing digital slides. The test is specific to pathology assessment in that it requires visual discrimination between colors derived from hematoxylin and eosin staining, with a perceptual difference of ±1 delta E (dE). This tool evaluates the transfer of a 1 dE signal through the digital image display chain, including the observers' contrast and color responses within the test color range. The web-based system has been rapidly developed and deployed as a response to the COVID-19 pandemic and may be used by anyone in the world to help optimize flexible working conditions at: http://www. virtualpathology.leeds.ac.uk/res earch/systems/pouqa/.

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