AI Article Synopsis

  • Routine analysis of Ki-67 for breast cancer is not commonly used in clinical settings due to issues with reproducibility and the time-consuming nature of manually counting cells by pathologists.
  • A study used digital image analysis to compare Ki-67 scores obtained by image processing with those scored by pathologists, revealing a moderate correlation between the two methods.
  • The findings showed that high Ki-67 indices (whether scored by pathologists or through digital analysis) were linked to poorer relapse-free survival in certain breast cancer patient subgroups, highlighting the potential of digital analysis as a valuable tool.

Article Abstract

Background: Routine analysis of Ki-67 is not widely recommended for clinical decision-making because of poor reproducibility. Furthermore, counting numerous cells can be laborious for pathologists. Digital image analysis for immunohistochemical analysis was recently developed; however, the clinical efficacy of the Ki-67 index obtained using image analysis is unknown.

Methods: We retrospectively identified female patients with breast cancer with immunohistochemical Ki-67 and survival data using the pathology database at the Tokai University, Japan. Ki-67 expression was scored by three pathologists. Slides were scanned and converted to virtual slides; Ki-67-positive cells were counted using image analysis. Ki-67 indices obtained by the pathologist's scoring and image analysis were evaluated by 2 × 2 analysis. Relationships between Ki-67 index and survival outcomes were evaluated using the Kaplan-Meier method and compared using the log-rank test.

Results: Based on the 2 × 2 analysis, Ki-67 index obtained using image analysis was moderately correlated with the pathologist's scoring for all patients (κ 0.41; sensitivity, 0.573; specificity, 0.878). Poorer relapse-free survival was associated with high Ki-67 index than with low Ki-67 index for estrogen receptor-positive, human epidermal growth factor receptor 2-negative, and stage I or II patients scored by pathologists (p < 0.001) and obtained using image analysis (p = 0.031).

Conclusions: The Ki-67 indices obtained using image analysis were moderately correlated with those scored by pathologists. Digital image analysis can be effective for measuring Ki-67 values, because they are associated with relapse-free survival in estrogen receptor-positive, human epidermal growth factor receptor 2-negative, and patients at stage I or II.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s12282-018-0885-1DOI Listing

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