2 research outputs found

    Automated Cancer Diagnostics via Analysis of Optical and Chemical Images by Deep and Shallow Learning

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    Funding Information: The Icelandic Centre for Research, grant no. 174566051 & 207301. The Icelandic Breast Cancer Research Fund, Göngum Saman. CRUK GC, NIHR/Imperial BRC. Dr Jean Alero Thomas Scholarship. Funding Information: Funding: The Icelandic Centre for Research, grant no. 174566051 & 207301. The Icelandic Breast Cancer Research Fund, Göngum Saman. CRUK GC, NIHR/Imperial BRC. Dr Jean Alero Thomas Scholarship. Publisher Copyright: © 2022 by the authors. Licensee MDPI, Basel, Switzerland.Optical microscopy has long been the gold standard to analyse tissue samples for the diagnostics of various diseases, such as cancer. The current diagnostic workflow is time-consuming and labour-intensive, and manual annotation by a qualified pathologist is needed. With the ever-increasing number of tissue blocks and the complexity of molecular diagnostics, new approaches have been developed as complimentary or alternative solutions for the current workflow, such as digital pathology and mass spectrometry imaging (MSI). This study compares the performance of a digital pathology workflow using deep learning for tissue recognition and an MSI approach utilising shallow learning to annotate formalin-fixed and paraffin-embedded (FFPE) breast cancer tissue microarrays (TMAs). Results show that both deep learning algorithms based on conventional optical images and MSI-based shallow learning can provide automated diagnostics with F1-scores higher than 90%, with the latter intrinsically built on biochemical information that can be used for further analysis.Peer reviewe

    Automated Cancer Diagnostics via Analysis of Optical and Chemical Images by Deep and Shallow Learning

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    Optical microscopy has long been the gold standard to analyse tissue samples for the diagnostics of various diseases, such as cancer. The current diagnostic workflow is time-consuming and labour-intensive, and manual annotation by a qualified pathologist is needed. With the ever-increasing number of tissue blocks and the complexity of molecular diagnostics, new approaches have been developed as complimentary or alternative solutions for the current workflow, such as digital pathology and mass spectrometry imaging (MSI). This study compares the performance of a digital pathology workflow using deep learning for tissue recognition and an MSI approach utilising shallow learning to annotate formalin-fixed and paraffin-embedded (FFPE) breast cancer tissue microarrays (TMAs). Results show that both deep learning algorithms based on conventional optical images and MSI-based shallow learning can provide automated diagnostics with F1-scores higher than 90%, with the latter intrinsically built on biochemical information that can be used for further analysis
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