6 research outputs found

    Predicting gene expression in T cell differentiation from histone modifications and transcription factor binding affinities by linear mixture models

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    Abstract Background The differentiation process from stem cells to fully differentiated cell types is controlled by the interplay of chromatin modifications and transcription factor activity. Histone modifications or transcription factors frequently act in a multi-functional manner, with a given DNA motif or histone modification conveying both transcriptional repression and activation depending on its location in the promoter and other regulatory signals surrounding it. Results To account for the possible multi functionality of regulatory signals, we model the observed gene expression patterns by a mixture of linear regression models. We apply the approach to identify the underlying histone modifications and transcription factors guiding gene expression of differentiated CD4+ T cells. The method improves the gene expression prediction in relation to the use of a single linear model, as often used by previous approaches. Moreover, it recovered the known role of the modifications H3K4me3 and H3K27me3 in activating cell specific genes and of some transcription factors related to CD4+ T differentiation.</p

    Impact of Tomosynthesis Acquisition on 3D Segmentations of Breast Outline and Adipose/Dense Tissue with AI: A Simulation-Based Study

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    Digital breast tomosynthesis (DBT) reconstructions introduce out-of-plane artifacts and false-tissue boundaries impacting the dense/adipose and breast outline (convex hull) segmentations. A virtual clinical trial method was proposed to segment both the breast tissues and the breast outline in DBT reconstructions. The DBT images of a representative population were simulated using three acquisition geometries: a left–right scan (conventional, I), a two-directional scan in the shape of a “T” (II), and an extra-wide range (XWR, III) left–right scan at a six-times higher dose than I. The nnU-Net was modified including two losses for segmentation: (1) tissues and (2) breast outline. The impact of loss (1) and the combination of loss (1) and (2) was evaluated using models trained with data simulating geometry I. The impact of the geometry was evaluated using the combined loss (1&2). The loss (1&2) improved the convex hull estimates, resolving 22.2% of the false classification of air voxels. Geometry II was superior to I and III, resolving 99.1% and 96.8% of the false classification of air voxels. Geometry III (Dice = (0.98, 0.94)) was superior to I (0.92, 0.78) and II (0.93, 0.74) for the tissue segmentation (adipose, dense, respectively). Thus, the loss (1&2) provided better segmentation, and geometries T and XWR improved the dense/adipose and breast outline segmentations relative to the conventional scan

    Multiclass Segmentation of Breast Tissue and Suspicious Findings: A Simulation-Based Study for the Development of Self-Steering Tomosynthesis

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    In breast tomosynthesis, multiple low-dose projections are acquired in a single scanning direction over a limited angular range to produce cross-sectional planes through the breast for three-dimensional imaging interpretation. We built a next-generation tomosynthesis system capable of multidirectional source motion with the intent to customize scanning motions around “suspicious findings”. Customized acquisitions can improve the image quality in areas that require increased scrutiny, such as breast cancers, architectural distortions, and dense clusters. In this paper, virtual clinical trial techniques were used to analyze whether a finding or area at high risk of masking cancers can be detected in a single low-dose projection and thus be used for motion planning. This represents a step towards customizing the subsequent low-dose projection acquisitions autonomously, guided by the first low-dose projection; we call this technique “self-steering tomosynthesis.” A U-Net was used to classify the low-dose projections into “risk classes” in simulated breasts with soft-tissue lesions; class probabilities were modified using post hoc Dirichlet calibration (DC). DC improved the multiclass segmentation (Dice = 0.43 vs. 0.28 before DC) and significantly reduced false positives (FPs) from the class of the highest risk of masking (sensitivity = 81.3% at 2 FPs per image vs. 76.0%). This simulation-based study demonstrated the feasibility of identifying suspicious areas using a single low-dose projection for self-steering tomosynthesis

    Novel Perlin-based phantoms using 3D models of compressed breast shapes and fractal noise

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    Virtual clinical trials (VCTs) have been used widely to evaluate digital breast tomosynthesis (DBT) systems. VCTs require realistic simulations of the breast anatomy (phantoms) to characterize lesions and to estimate risk of masking cancers. This study introduces the use of Perlin-based phantoms to optimize the acquisition geometry of a novel DBT prototype. These phantoms were developed using a GPU implementation of a novel library called Perlin-CuPy. The breast anatomy is simulated using 3D models under mammography cranio-caudal compression. In total, 240 phantoms were created using compressed breast thickness, chest-wall to nipple distance, and skin thickness that varied in a {[35, 75], [59, 130), [1.0, 2.0]} mm interval, respectively. DBT projections and reconstructions of the phantoms were simulated using two acquisition geometries of our DBT prototype. The performance of both acquisition geometries was compared using breast volume segmentations of the Perlin phantoms. Results show that breast volume estimates are improved with the introduction of posterior-anterior motion of the x-ray source in DBT acquisitions. The breast volume is overestimated in DBT, varying substantially with the acquisition geometry; segmentation errors are more evident for thicker and larger breasts. These results provide additional evidence and suggest that custom acquisition geometries can improve the performance and accuracy in DBT. Perlin phantoms help to identify limitations in acquisition geometries and to optimize the performance of the DBT prototypes
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