国产精品国产精品一区精品国产自在现偷99精品国产在热2019国产拍偷精品网国产精品视频全国免费观看,国产精品v欧美精品v日韩精品青青精品视频国产久久国产精品久久精品国产亚洲精品国产精品国产欧美精品一区二区三区,国产精品第一页国产亚洲精品国产福利国产精品自拍国产精品视频在线观看亚洲国产精品一区二区久久国产精品国产三级国产专不,国产精品视频大陆精大陆国产国语精品2019精品国产品对白在线285年香蕉精品国产高清自在自线隔壁老王国产在线精品在线观看精品国产福利片,国产三级精品三级在专区精品国产自在现偷国产精品一区二区三区国产日韩精品欧美一区喷水亚洲精品国产精品国自产国产在线精品一区二区不卡

熱門搜索:A549    293T 金黃色葡萄球菌 大腸桿菌 AKK菌
購物車 1 種商品 - 共0元
當(dāng)前位置: 首頁 > 行業(yè)資訊 > Making digital tissue imaging better

Making digital tissue imaging better

 

Making digital tissue imaging better

Biomedical researchers develop first open-source, quality-control review tool for fast-growing digital pathology field

Date:April 18, 2019

Source:Case Western Reserve University

Summary:A low-tech problem troubles the high-tech world of digital pathology imaging: There are no reliable standards for the quality of digitized tissue slides comprising the source material for computers reading and analyzing vast numbers of images. Poor-quality slides get mixed in with accurate slides, potentially confusing a computer program trying to learn what a cancerous cell looks like. Researchers are trying to fix this, sharing an open-source quality control standard.

There's a low-tech problem troubling the high-tech world of digital pathology imaging.

The issue: Even as digital pathology makes rapid advances worldwide -- with more physicians analyzing tissue images on "smart" computers to diagnose patients -- there are no reliable standards for the preparation and digitization of the tissue slides themselves.

That means poor quality slides get mixed in with clear and accurate slides, potentially confusing or misleading a computer program trying to learn what a cancerous cell looks like, for example.

Researchers from Case Western Reserve University are trying to change that.

Bioengineering researcher Anant Madabhushi and Andrew Janowczyk, a senior research fellow in Madabhushi's Center for Computational Imaging and Personal Diagnostics, have developed a program that they say will ensure the quality of digital images being used for diagnostic and research purposes.

The two unveiled their new quality-control tool in the most recent edition of the Journal of Clinical Oncology Clinical Informatics and are being supported by a three-year, $1.2 million grant from the National Cancer Institute.

The new tool incorporates a series of measurements and classifiers to help users flag corrupted images and help retain those that will aid technicians and physicians in their diagnoses.

"The idea is simple: assess digital images and determine which slides are worthy for analysis by a computer and which are not," said Madabhushi, the F. Alex Nason Professor II of biomedical engineering at the Case School of Engineering. "This is important right now as digital pathology is taking off worldwide and laying the groundwork for more use of AI (artificial intelligence) for interrogating tissue images."

The application is "open source" -- or free for anyone to use, modify and extend. It can be accessed through an online repository. It was developed by Janowczyk about 18 months ago after discovering what he believed to be a surprising number of poor-quality slides from the well-known Cancer Genome Atlas, home to more than 30,000 tissue slides of cancer samples.

Janowczyk said about 10 percent of the 800 cancer sample slides he reviewed had problems, ranging from a crack in the slide or an air bubble between the slide's layers.

'Knife chatter' among many slide imperfections

To appreciate the value -- and risk -- in relying on the highly technical, smart-computer, digital-imaging cancer diagnosis, it's helpful to understand the fundamental steps in getting there.

While these high-tech approaches can process thousands of images per second, they're relying on digital images of the same kind of tissue slides that pathologists have been making for generations. And those slides, when viewed through a microscope, have more imperfections than you might think.

To create a slide, the pathologist first harvests a block of tissue from an organ dissection, places a small slice of the tissue on a piece of glass that will make up a slide. The tissue is then stained to reveal its cellular patterns. A second smaller piece of glass is then placed on top of the tissue sample to protect it.

The quality can be compromised in slide preparation by air bubbles, smears and ragged cuts (called "knife chatter") in the tissue or even during the digitization process which may introduce blurriness and brightness issues.

"A microscope can't focus on areas that have distorted quality," said Janowczyk, who is also a bioinformatician at the Swiss Institute of Bioinformatics. (Bioinformatics is the science of collecting and analyzing complex biological data such as genetic codes or, in this case, digitized images of tissue slides.) "And it took me days to go through all of those slides to manually identify and remove the bad ones. It was then that I realized we needed a faster, automated way to make sure we had only the good tissue slide images."

The result, Madabhushi said, moves toward a true "democratization of imaging technology" for better diagnoses of cancer and other diseases.

Partners on the new project -- called "Histo-QC," for "histology," the study of the microscopic structure of tissues, and "Quality Control" -- include researchers from University Hospitals, the Perelman School of Medicine at the University of Pennsylvania and the Louis Stokes Cleveland VA Medical Center.

Madabhushi established the CCIPD at Case Western Reserve in 2012. The lab, which now includes about 50 researchers, has become a global leader in the detection, diagnosis and characterization of various cancers and other diseases by meshing medical imaging, machine learning and artificial intelligence.

Some of its most recent work, in collaboration with others from New York University and Yale University, has been using AI to predict which lung cancer patients would benefit from adjuvant chemotherapy based off tissue slide images. That advancement was named by by Prevention Magazine as one of the top 10 medical breakthroughs of 2018.

advertisement


Story Source:

Materials provided by Case Western Reserve UniversityNote: Content may be edited for style and length.

 

平安县| 洪泽县| 罗源县| 射洪县| 天祝| 滕州市| 桐乡市| 永顺县| 金秀| 乌兰察布市| 普格县| 探索| 铜梁县| 乌拉特中旗| 长沙市| 满洲里市| 德清县| 曲松县| 都匀市| 龙泉市| 潜山县| 新竹市| 星座| 阜宁县| 杭州市| 年辖:市辖区| 根河市| 湘乡市| 名山县| 龙游县| 巴青县| 永济市| 木兰县| 台南县| 沿河| 隆昌县| 澳门| 龙南县| 若羌县| 江阴市| 外汇|