Automated reporting of cervical biopsies using artificial intelligence.
Mahnaz MohammadiChristina FellDavid MorrisonSheeba SyedPrakash KonanahalliSarah BellGareth BrysonOgnjen ArandjelovićDavid J HarrisonDavid Harris-BirtillPublished in: PLOS digital health (2024)
When detected at an early stage, the 5-year survival rate for people with invasive cervical cancer is 92%. Being aware of signs and symptoms of cervical cancer and early detection greatly improve the chances of successful treatment. We have developed an Artificial Intelligence (AI) algorithm, trained and evaluated on cervical biopsies for automated reporting of digital diagnostics. The aim is to increase overall efficiency of pathological diagnosis and to have the performance tuned to high sensitivity for malignant cases. Having a tool for triage/identifying cancer and high grade lesions may potentially reduce reporting time by identifying areas of interest in a slide for the pathologist and therefore improving efficiency. We trained and validated our algorithm on 1738 cervical WSIs with one WSI per patient. On the independent test set of 811 WSIs, we achieved 93.4% malignant sensitivity for classifying slides. Recognising a WSI, with our algorithm, takes approximately 1.5 minutes on the NVIDIA Tesla V100 GPU. Whole slide images of different formats (TIFF, iSyntax, and CZI) can be processed using this code, and it is easily extendable to other formats.
Keyphrases
- artificial intelligence
- deep learning
- machine learning
- big data
- high grade
- early stage
- convolutional neural network
- adverse drug
- emergency department
- resistance training
- low grade
- papillary thyroid
- squamous cell carcinoma
- magnetic resonance
- case report
- ultrasound guided
- sentinel lymph node
- body composition
- sleep quality
- high throughput
- childhood cancer
- single cell