Abstract:
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[EN] Background and Objective:
Mitotic activity is a crucial biomarker for diagnosing and predicting outcomes for different types of cancers, particularly breast cancer. However, manual mitosis counting is challenging and ...[+]
[EN] Background and Objective:
Mitotic activity is a crucial biomarker for diagnosing and predicting outcomes for different types of cancers, particularly breast cancer. However, manual mitosis counting is challenging and time-consuming for pathologists, with moderate reproducibility due to biopsy slide size, low mitotic cell density, and pattern heterogeneity. In recent years, deep learning methods based on convolutional neural networks (CNNs) have been proposed to address these limitations. Nonetheless, these methods have been hampered by the available data labels, which usually consist only of the centroids of mitosis, and by the incoming noise from annotated hard negatives. As a result, complex algorithms with multiple stages are often required to refine the labels at the pixel level and reduce the number of false positives.
Methods:
This article presents a novel weakly supervised approach for mitosis detection that utilizes only image-level labels on histological hematoxylin and eosin (H&E) images, avoiding the need for complex labeling scenarios. Also, an Uninformed Teacher-Student (UTS) pipeline is introduced to detect and distill hard samples by comparing weakly supervised localizations and the annotated centroids, using strong augmentations to enhance uncertainty. Additionally, an automatic proliferation score is proposed that mimicks the pathologist-annotated mitotic activity index (MAI). The proposed approach is evaluated on three publicly available datasets for mitosis detection on breast histology samples, and two datasets for mitotic activity counting in whole-slide images.
Results:
The proposed framework achieves competitive performance with relevant prior literature in all the datasets used for evaluation without explicitly using the mitosis location information during training. This approach challenges previous methods that rely on strong mitosis location information and multiple stages to refine false positives. Furthermore, the proposed pipeline for hard-sample distillation demonstrates promising dataset-specific improvements. Concretely, when the annotation has not been thoroughly refined by multiple pathologists, the UTS model offers improvements of up to
in mitosis localization, thanks to the detection and distillation of uncertain cases. Concerning the mitosis counting task, the proposed automatic proliferation score shows a moderate positive correlation with the MAI annotated by pathologists at the biopsy level on two external datasets.
Conclusions:
The proposed Uninformed Teacher-Student pipeline leverages strong augmentations to distill uncertain samples and measure dissimilarities between predicted and annotated mitosis. Results demonstrate the feasibility of the weakly supervised approach and highlight its potential as an objective evaluation tool for tumor proliferation.
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Thanks:
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This work was funded by the Horizon 2020 European Union research and innovation programme under the Marie Sklodowska Curie grant agreement No 860627 (CLARIFY Project) . The work of Sandra Morales has been co-funded by the ...[+]
This work was funded by the Horizon 2020 European Union research and innovation programme under the Marie Sklodowska Curie grant agreement No 860627 (CLARIFY Project) . The work of Sandra Morales has been co-funded by the Universitat Politecnica de Valencia, Spain through the program PAID-10-20. The work of J. Silva-Rodriguez was carried out during his previous position at Universitat Politecnica de Valencia. This work was partially funded by Generalitat Valenciana through project CIPROM/2022/20 and with Ayuda a Primeros Proyectos de Investigacion (PAID-06-23) , Vicerrectorado de Investigacion of the Universitat Politecnica de Valencia. Funding for open access charge: Universitat Politecnica de Valencia (PAID-12-23).
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