Journal of Pathology Informatics (Jan 2017)

Deep learning for classification of colorectal polyps on whole-slide images

  • Bruno Korbar,
  • Andrea M Olofson,
  • Allen P Miraflor,
  • Catherine M Nicka,
  • Matthew A Suriawinata,
  • Lorenzo Torresani,
  • Arief A Suriawinata,
  • Saeed Hassanpour

DOI
https://doi.org/10.4103/jpi.jpi_34_17
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 8, no. 1
pp. 30 – 30

Abstract

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Context: Histopathological characterization of colorectal polyps is critical for determining the risk of colorectal cancer and future rates of surveillance for patients. However, this characterization is a challenging task and suffers from significant inter- and intra-observer variability. Aims: We built an automatic image analysis method that can accurately classify different types of colorectal polyps on whole-slide images to help pathologists with this characterization and diagnosis. Setting and Design: Our method is based on deep-learning techniques, which rely on numerous levels of abstraction for data representation and have shown state-of-the-art results for various image analysis tasks. Subjects and Methods: Our method covers five common types of polyps (i.e., hyperplastic, sessile serrated, traditional serrated, tubular, and tubulovillous/villous) that are included in the US Multisociety Task Force guidelines for colorectal cancer risk assessment and surveillance. We developed multiple deep-learning approaches by leveraging a dataset of 2074 crop images, which were annotated by multiple domain expert pathologists as reference standards. Statistical Analysis: We evaluated our method on an independent test set of 239 whole-slide images and measured standard machine-learning evaluation metrics of accuracy, precision, recall, and F1 score and their 95% confidence intervals. Results: Our evaluation shows that our method with residual network architecture achieves the best performance for classification of colorectal polyps on whole-slide images (overall accuracy: 93.0%, 95% confidence interval: 89.0%–95.9%). Conclusions: Our method can reduce the cognitive burden on pathologists and improve their efficacy in histopathological characterization of colorectal polyps and in subsequent risk assessment and follow-up recommendations.

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