Scientific Reports (Nov 2021)

Developing diagnostic assessment of breast lumpectomy tissues using radiomic and optical signatures

  • Samuel S. Streeter,
  • Brady Hunt,
  • Rebecca A. Zuurbier,
  • Wendy A. Wells,
  • Keith D. Paulsen,
  • Brian W. Pogue

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1038/s41598-021-01414-z
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 11, no. 1
pp. 1 – 10

Abstract

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Abstract High positive margin rates in oncologic breast-conserving surgery are a pressing clinical problem. Volumetric X-ray scanning is emerging as a powerful ex vivo specimen imaging technique for analyzing resection margins, but X-rays lack contrast between non-malignant and malignant fibrous tissues. In this study, combined micro-CT and wide-field optical image radiomics were developed to classify malignancy of breast cancer tissues, demonstrating that X-ray/optical radiomics improve malignancy classification. Ninety-two standardized features were extracted from co-registered micro-CT and optical spatial frequency domain imaging samples extracted from 54 breast tumors exhibiting seven tissue subtypes confirmed by microscopic histological analysis. Multimodal feature sets improved classification performance versus micro-CT alone when adipose samples were included (AUC = 0.88 vs. 0.90; p-value = 3.65e−11) and excluded, focusing the classification task on exclusively non-malignant fibrous versus malignant tissues (AUC = 0.78 vs. 0.85; p-value = 9.33e−14). Extending the radiomics approach to high-dimensional optical data—termed “optomics” in this study—offers a promising optical image analysis technique for cancer detection. Radiomic feature data and classification source code are publicly available.