3 research outputs found
Practical Policy Optimization with Personalized Experimentation
Many organizations measure treatment effects via an experimentation platform
to evaluate the casual effect of product variations prior to full-scale
deployment. However, standard experimentation platforms do not perform
optimally for end user populations that exhibit heterogeneous treatment effects
(HTEs). Here we present a personalized experimentation framework, Personalized
Experiments (PEX), which optimizes treatment group assignment at the user level
via HTE modeling and sequential decision policy optimization to optimize
multiple short-term and long-term outcomes simultaneously. We describe an
end-to-end workflow that has proven to be successful in practice and can be
readily implemented using open-source software.Comment: 5 pages, 2 figure
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Detection of human brain tumor infiltration with quantitative stimulated Raman scattering microscopy
Differentiating tumor from normal brain is a major barrier to achieving optimal outcome in brain tumor surgery. New imaging techniques for visualizing tumor margins during surgery are needed to improve surgical results. We recently demonstrated the ability of stimulated Raman scattering (SRS) microscopy, a nondestructive, label-free optical method, to reveal glioma infiltration in animal models. We show that SRS reveals human brain tumor infiltration in fresh, unprocessed surgical specimens from 22 neurosurgical patients. SRS detects tumor infiltration in near-perfect agreement with standard hematoxylin and eosin light microscopy (κ = 0.86). The unique chemical contrast specific to SRS microscopy enables tumor detection by revealing quantifiable alterations in tissue cellularity, axonal density, and protein/lipid ratio in tumor-infiltrated tissues. To ensure that SRS microscopic data can be easily used in brain tumor surgery, without the need for expert interpretation, we created a classifier based on cellularity, axonal density, and protein/lipid ratio in SRS images capable of detecting tumor infiltration with 97.5% sensitivity and 98.5% specificity. Quantitative SRS microscopy detects the spread of tumor cells, even in brain tissue surrounding a tumor that appears grossly normal. By accurately revealing tumor infiltration, quantitative SRS microscopy holds potential for improving the accuracy of brain tumor surgery.Chemistry and Chemical Biolog
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Rapid intraoperative histology of unprocessed surgical specimens via fibre-laser-based stimulated Raman scattering microscopy
Conventional methods for intraoperative histopathologic diagnosis are labor- and time-intensive and may delay decision-making during brain tumor surgery. Stimulated Raman scattering (SRS) microscopy, a label-free optical process, has been shown to rapidly detect brain tumor infiltration in fresh, unprocessed human tissues. Previously, the execution of SRS microscopy in a clinical setting has not been possible. We report the first demonstration of SRS microscopy in an operating room using a portable fiber-laser-based microscope in unprocessed specimens from 101 neurosurgical patients. Additionally, we introduce an image-processing method, stimulated Raman histology (SRH), which leverages SRS images to create virtual hematoxylin and eosin- stained slides, revealing essential diagnostic features. In a simulation of intraoperative pathologic consultation in 30 patients, the concordance of SRH and conventional histology for predicting diagnosis was nearly perfect (κ>0.89) and accuracy exceeded 92%. We also built and validated a multilayer perceptron based on quantified SRH image attributes that predicts brain tumor subtype with 90% accuracy. This study provides insight into how SRH can now be used to improve the surgical care of brain tumor patients.Chemistry and Chemical Biolog