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1.
Infect Immun ; : e0026323, 2024 Jun 20.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38899881

ABSTRACT

Because most humans resist Mycobacterium tuberculosis infection, there is a paucity of lung samples to study. To address this gap, we infected Diversity Outbred mice with M. tuberculosis and studied the lungs of mice in different disease states. After a low-dose aerosol infection, progressors succumbed to acute, inflammatory lung disease within 60 days, while controllers maintained asymptomatic infection for at least 60 days, and then developed chronic pulmonary tuberculosis (TB) lasting months to more than 1 year. Here, we identified features of asymptomatic M. tuberculosis infection by applying computational and statistical approaches to multimodal data sets. Cytokines and anti-M. tuberculosis cell wall antibodies discriminated progressors vs controllers with chronic pulmonary TB but could not classify mice with asymptomatic infection. However, a novel deep-learning neural network trained on lung granuloma images was able to accurately classify asymptomatically infected lungs vs acute pulmonary TB in progressors vs chronic pulmonary TB in controllers, and discrimination was based on perivascular and peribronchiolar lymphocytes. Because the discriminatory lesion was rich in lymphocytes and CD4 T cell-mediated immunity is required for resistance, we expected CD4 T-cell genes would be elevated in asymptomatic infection. However, the significantly different, highly expressed genes were from B-cell pathways (e.g., Bank1, Cd19, Cd79, Fcmr, Ms4a1, Pax5, and H2-Ob), and CD20+ B cells were enriched in the perivascular and peribronchiolar regions of mice with asymptomatic M. tuberculosis infection. Together, these results indicate that genetically controlled B-cell responses are important for establishing asymptomatic M. tuberculosis lung infection.

2.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38756441

ABSTRACT

Current deep learning methods in histopathology are limited by the small amount of available data and time consumption in labeling the data. Colorectal cancer (CRC) tumor budding quantification performed using H&E-stained slides is crucial for cancer staging and prognosis but is subject to labor-intensive annotation and human bias. Thus, acquiring a large-scale, fully annotated dataset for training a tumor budding (TB) segmentation/detection system is difficult. Here, we present a DatasetGAN-based approach that can generate essentially an unlimited number of images with TB masks from a moderate number of unlabeled images and a few annotated images. The images generated by our model closely resemble the real colon tissue on H&E-stained slides. We test the performance of this model by training a downstream segmentation model, UNet++, on the generated images and masks. Our results show that the trained UNet++ model can achieve reasonable TB segmentation performance, especially at the instance level. This study demonstrates the potential of developing an annotation-efficient segmentation model for automatic TB detection and quantification.

3.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38752165

ABSTRACT

Tumor budding refers to a cluster of one to four tumor cells located at the tumor-invasive front. While tumor budding is a prognostic factor for colorectal cancer, counting and grading tumor budding are time consuming and not highly reproducible. There could be high inter- and intra-reader disagreement on H&E evaluation. This leads to the noisy training (imperfect ground truth) of deep learning algorithms, resulting in high variability and losing their ability to generalize on unseen datasets. Pan-cytokeratin staining is one of the potential solutions to enhance the agreement, but it is not routinely used to identify tumor buds and can lead to false positives. Therefore, we aim to develop a weakly-supervised deep learning method for tumor bud detection from routine H&E-stained images that does not require strict tissue-level annotations. We also propose Bayesian Multiple Instance Learning (BMIL) that combines multiple annotated regions during the training process to further enhance the generalizability and stability in tumor bud detection. Our dataset consists of 29 colorectal cancer H&E-stained images that contain 115 tumor buds per slide on average. In six-fold cross-validation, our method demonstrated an average precision and recall of 0.94, and 0.86 respectively. These results provide preliminary evidence of the feasibility of our approach in improving the generalizability in tumor budding detection using H&E images while avoiding the need for non-routine immunohistochemical staining methods.

4.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38765185

ABSTRACT

Colorectal cancer (CRC) is the third most common cancer in the United States. Tumor Budding (TB) detection and quantification are crucial yet labor-intensive steps in determining the CRC stage through the analysis of histopathology images. To help with this process, we adapt the Segment Anything Model (SAM) on the CRC histopathology images to segment TBs using SAM-Adapter. In this approach, we automatically take task-specific prompts from CRC images and train the SAM model in a parameter-efficient way. We compare the predictions of our model with the predictions from a trained-from-scratch model using the annotations from a pathologist. As a result, our model achieves an intersection over union (IoU) of 0.65 and an instance-level Dice score of 0.75, which are promising in matching the pathologist's TB annotation. We believe our study offers a novel solution to identify TBs on H&E-stained histopathology images. Our study also demonstrates the value of adapting the foundation model for pathology image segmentation tasks.

5.
Comput Biol Med ; 167: 107607, 2023 12.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37890421

ABSTRACT

Multiple instance learning (MIL) models have achieved remarkable success in analyzing whole slide images (WSIs) for disease classification problems. However, with regard to giga-pixel WSI classification problems, current MIL models are often incapable of differentiating a WSI with extremely small tumor lesions. This minute tumor-to-normal area ratio in a MIL bag inhibits the attention mechanism from properly weighting the areas corresponding to minor tumor lesions. To overcome this challenge, we propose salient instance inference MIL (SiiMIL), a weakly-supervised MIL model for WSI classification. We introduce a novel representation learning for histopathology images to identify representative normal keys. These keys facilitate the selection of salient instances within WSIs, forming bags with high tumor-to-normal ratios. Finally, an attention mechanism is employed for slide-level classification based on formed bags. Our results show that salient instance inference can improve the tumor-to-normal area ratio in the tumor WSIs. As a result, SiiMIL achieves 0.9225 AUC and 0.7551 recall on the Camelyon16 dataset, which outperforms the existing MIL models. In addition, SiiMIL can generate tumor-sensitive attention heatmaps that is more interpretable to pathologists than the widely used attention-based MIL method. Our experiments imply that SiiMIL can accurately identify tumor instances, which could only take up less than 1% of a WSI, so that the ratio of tumor to normal instances within a bag can increase by two to four times.


Subject(s)
Image Interpretation, Computer-Assisted , Machine Learning , Neoplasms , Humans , Neoplasms/diagnostic imaging
6.
Cancers (Basel) ; 15(13)2023 Jun 30.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37444538

ABSTRACT

The early diagnosis of lymph node metastasis in breast cancer is essential for enhancing treatment outcomes and overall prognosis. Unfortunately, pathologists often fail to identify small or subtle metastatic deposits, leading them to rely on cytokeratin stains for improved detection, although this approach is not without its flaws. To address the need for early detection, multiple-instance learning (MIL) has emerged as the preferred deep learning method for automatic tumor detection on whole slide images (WSIs). However, existing methods often fail to identify some small lesions due to insufficient attention to small regions. Attention-based multiple-instance learning (ABMIL)-based methods can be particularly problematic because they may focus too much on normal regions, leaving insufficient attention for small-tumor lesions. In this paper, we propose a new ABMIL-based model called normal representative keyset ABMIL (NRK-ABMIL), which addresseses this issue by adjusting the attention mechanism to give more attention to lesions. To accomplish this, the NRK-ABMIL creates an optimal keyset of normal patch embeddings called the normal representative keyset (NRK). The NRK roughly represents the underlying distribution of all normal patch embeddings and is used to modify the attention mechanism of the ABMIL. We evaluated NRK-ABMIL on the publicly available Camelyon16 and Camelyon17 datasets and found that it outperformed existing state-of-the-art methods in accurately identifying small tumor lesions that may spread over a few patches. Additionally, the NRK-ABMIL also performed exceptionally well in identifying medium/large tumor lesions.

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