AI Article Synopsis

  • Digital Image Analysis (DIA) improves the accuracy and reproducibility of measuring cell populations in breast cancer tissues by analyzing markers like the Ki67 labeling index, which is essential for prognosis and prediction.
  • A study employed DIA on 302 Ki67-stained breast cancer specimens using whole-slide images and a tumor classifier algorithm to gather data on tumor characteristics, comparing them to traditional methods.
  • The analysis discovered four key factors related to tumor characteristics and enabled the identification of tumor heterogeneity, leading to better visualization of Ki67 activity and the potential improvement of digital immunohistochemistry techniques.

Article Abstract

Digital image analysis (DIA) enables higher accuracy, reproducibility, and capacity to enumerate cell populations by immunohistochemistry; however, the most unique benefits may be obtained by evaluating the spatial distribution and intra-tissue variance of markers. The proliferative activity of breast cancer tissue, estimated by the Ki67 labeling index (Ki67 LI), is a prognostic and predictive biomarker requiring robust measurement methodologies. We performed DIA on whole-slide images (WSI) of 302 surgically removed Ki67-stained breast cancer specimens; the tumour classifier algorithm was used to automatically detect tumour tissue but was not trained to distinguish between invasive and non-invasive carcinoma cells. The WSI DIA-generated data were subsampled by hexagonal tiling (HexT). Distribution and texture parameters were compared to conventional WSI DIA and pathology report data. Factor analysis of the data set, including total numbers of tumor cells, the Ki67 LI and Ki67 distribution, and texture indicators, extracted 4 factors, identified as entropy, proliferation, bimodality, and cellularity. The factor scores were further utilized in cluster analysis, outlining subcategories of heterogeneous tumors with predominant entropy, bimodality, or both at different levels of proliferative activity. The methodology also allowed the visualization of Ki67 LI heterogeneity in tumors and the automated detection and quantitative evaluation of Ki67 hotspots, based on the upper quintile of the HexT data, conceptualized as the "Pareto hotspot". We conclude that systematic subsampling of DIA-generated data into HexT enables comprehensive Ki67 LI analysis that reflects aspects of intra-tumor heterogeneity and may serve as a methodology to improve digital immunohistochemistry in general.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s00428-015-1865-xDOI Listing

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