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1.
Sci Rep ; 11(1): 11579, 2021 06 02.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34078928

RESUMO

Histopathology tissue analysis is considered the gold standard in cancer diagnosis and prognosis. Whole-slide imaging (WSI), i.e., the scanning and digitization of entire histology slides, are now being adopted across the world in pathology labs. Trained histopathologists can provide an accurate diagnosis of biopsy specimens based on WSI data. Given the dimensionality of WSIs and the increase in the number of potential cancer cases, analyzing these images is a time-consuming process. Automated segmentation of tumorous tissue helps in elevating the precision, speed, and reproducibility of research. In the recent past, deep learning-based techniques have provided state-of-the-art results in a wide variety of image analysis tasks, including the analysis of digitized slides. However, deep learning-based solutions pose many technical challenges, including the large size of WSI data, heterogeneity in images, and complexity of features. In this study, we propose a generalized deep learning-based framework for histopathology tissue analysis to address these challenges. Our framework is, in essence, a sequence of individual techniques in the preprocessing-training-inference pipeline which, in conjunction, improve the efficiency and the generalizability of the analysis. The combination of techniques we have introduced includes an ensemble segmentation model, division of the WSI into smaller overlapping patches while addressing class imbalances, efficient techniques for inference, and an efficient, patch-based uncertainty estimation framework. Our ensemble consists of DenseNet-121, Inception-ResNet-V2, and DeeplabV3Plus, where all the networks were trained end to end for every task. We demonstrate the efficacy and improved generalizability of our framework by evaluating it on a variety of histopathology tasks including breast cancer metastases (CAMELYON), colon cancer (DigestPath), and liver cancer (PAIP). Our proposed framework has state-of-the-art performance across all these tasks and is ranked within the top 5 currently for the challenges based on these datasets. The entire framework along with the trained models and the related documentation are made freely available at GitHub and PyPi. Our framework is expected to aid histopathologists in accurate and efficient initial diagnosis. Moreover, the estimated uncertainty maps will help clinicians to make informed decisions and further treatment planning or analysis.

2.
Med Image Anal ; 67: 101854, 2021 01.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33091742

RESUMO

Pathology Artificial Intelligence Platform (PAIP) is a free research platform in support of pathological artificial intelligence (AI). The main goal of the platform is to construct a high-quality pathology learning data set that will allow greater accessibility. The PAIP Liver Cancer Segmentation Challenge, organized in conjunction with the Medical Image Computing and Computer Assisted Intervention Society (MICCAI 2019), is the first image analysis challenge to apply PAIP datasets. The goal of the challenge was to evaluate new and existing algorithms for automated detection of liver cancer in whole-slide images (WSIs). Additionally, the PAIP of this year attempted to address potential future problems of AI applicability in clinical settings. In the challenge, participants were asked to use analytical data and statistical metrics to evaluate the performance of automated algorithms in two different tasks. The participants were given the two different tasks: Task 1 involved investigating Liver Cancer Segmentation and Task 2 involved investigating Viable Tumor Burden Estimation. There was a strong correlation between high performance of teams on both tasks, in which teams that performed well on Task 1 also performed well on Task 2. After evaluation, we summarized the top 11 team's algorithms. We then gave pathological implications on the easily predicted images for cancer segmentation and the challenging images for viable tumor burden estimation. Out of the 231 participants of the PAIP challenge datasets, a total of 64 were submitted from 28 team participants. The submitted algorithms predicted the automatic segmentation on the liver cancer with WSIs to an accuracy of a score estimation of 0.78. The PAIP challenge was created in an effort to combat the lack of research that has been done to address Liver cancer using digital pathology. It remains unclear of how the applicability of AI algorithms created during the challenge can affect clinical diagnoses. However, the results of this dataset and evaluation metric provided has the potential to aid the development and benchmarking of cancer diagnosis and segmentation.


Assuntos
Inteligência Artificial , Neoplasias Hepáticas , Algoritmos , Humanos , Processamento de Imagem Assistida por Computador , Neoplasias Hepáticas/diagnóstico por imagem , Carga Tumoral
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