Diagnostics (Sep 2022)

Breast Tumor Tissue Segmentation with Area-Based Annotation Using Convolutional Neural Network

  • Bendegúz H. Zováthi,
  • Réka Mohácsi,
  • Attila Marcell Szász,
  • György Cserey

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/diagnostics12092161
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 12, no. 9
p. 2161

Abstract

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In this paper, we propose a novel approach to segment tumor and normal regions in human breast tissues. Cancer is the second most common cause of death in our society; every eighth woman will be diagnosed with breast cancer in her life. Histological diagnosis is key in the process where oncotherapy is administered. Due to the time-consuming analysis and the lack of specialists alike, obtaining a timely diagnosis is often a difficult process in healthcare institutions, so there is an urgent need for improvement in diagnostics. To reduce costs and speed up the process, an automated algorithm could aid routine diagnostics. We propose an area-based annotation approach generalized by a new rule template to accurately solve high-resolution biological segmentation tasks in a time-efficient way. These algorithm and implementation rules provide an alternative solution for pathologists to make decisions as accurate as manually. This research is based on an individual database from Semmelweis University, containing 291 high-resolution, bright field microscopy breast tumor tissue images. A total of 70% of the 128 × 128-pixel resolution images (206,174 patches) were used for training a convolutional neural network to learn the features of normal and tumor tissue samples. The evaluation of the small regions results in high-resolution histopathological image segmentation; the optimal parameters were calculated on the validation dataset (29 images, 10%), considering the accuracy and time factor as well. The algorithm was tested on the test dataset (61 images, 20%), reaching a 99.10% f1 score on pixel level evaluation within 3 min on average. Besides the quantitative analyses, the system’s accuracy was measured qualitatively by a histopathologist, who confirmed that the algorithm was also accurate in regions not annotated before.

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