Frontiers in Medicine (Sep 2022)

Self-supervised learning mechanism for identification of eyelid malignant melanoma in pathologic slides with limited annotation

  • Linyan Wang,
  • Zijing Jiang,
  • An Shao,
  • Zhengyun Liu,
  • Renshu Gu,
  • Ruiquan Ge,
  • Gangyong Jia,
  • Yaqi Wang,
  • Juan Ye

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3389/fmed.2022.976467
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 9

Abstract

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PurposeThe lack of finely annotated pathologic data has limited the application of deep learning systems (DLS) to the automated interpretation of pathologic slides. Therefore, this study develops a robust self-supervised learning (SSL) pathology diagnostic system to automatically detect malignant melanoma (MM) in the eyelid with limited annotation.DesignDevelopment of a self-supervised diagnosis pipeline based on a public dataset, then refined and tested on a private, real-world clinical dataset.SubjectsA. Patchcamelyon (PCam)-a publicly accessible dataset for the classification task of patch-level histopathologic images. B. The Second Affiliated Hospital, Zhejiang University School of Medicine (ZJU-2) dataset – 524,307 patches (small sections cut from pathologic slide images) from 192 H&E-stained whole-slide-images (WSIs); only 72 WSIs were labeled by pathologists.MethodsPatchcamelyon was used to select a convolutional neural network (CNN) as the backbone for our SSL-based model. This model was further developed in the ZJU-2 dataset for patch-level classification with both labeled and unlabeled images to test its diagnosis ability. Then the algorithm retrieved information based on patch-level prediction to generate WSI-level classification results using random forest. A heatmap was computed for visualizing the decision-making process.Main outcome measure(s)The area under the receiver operating characteristic curve (AUC), accuracy, sensitivity, and specificity were used to evaluate the performance of the algorithm in identifying MM.ResultsResNet50 was selected as the backbone of the SSL-based model using the PCam dataset. This algorithm then achieved an AUC of 0.981 with an accuracy, sensitivity, and specificity of 90.9, 85.2, and 96.3% for the patch-level classification of the ZJU-2 dataset. For WSI-level diagnosis, the AUC, accuracy, sensitivity, and specificity were 0.974, 93.8%, 75.0%, and 100%, separately. For every WSI, a heatmap was generated based on the malignancy probability.ConclusionOur diagnostic system, which is based on SSL and trained with a dataset of limited annotation, can automatically identify MM in pathologic slides and highlight MM areas in WSIs by a probabilistic heatmap. In addition, this labor-saving and cost-efficient model has the potential to be refined to help diagnose other ophthalmic and non-ophthalmic malignancies.

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