IVCVQMMay 16, 2024

Region of Interest Detection in Melanocytic Skin Tumor Whole Slide Images -- Nevus & Melanoma

arXiv:2405.09851v11 citationsh-index: 22
Originality Synthesis-oriented
AI Analysis

This work addresses a domain-specific problem for clinical pathology by potentially reducing costs and improving cancer diagnosis speed and accuracy, though it appears incremental as it builds on existing deep-learning methods.

The researchers tackled automated region of interest detection in melanocytic skin tumor whole-slide images, achieving 92.3% accuracy in slide-level classification of nevi and melanomas on a test dataset.

Automated region of interest detection in histopathological image analysis is a challenging and important topic with tremendous potential impact on clinical practice. The deep-learning methods used in computational pathology may help us to reduce costs and increase the speed and accuracy of cancer diagnosis. We started with the UNC Melanocytic Tumor Dataset cohort that contains 160 hematoxylin and eosin whole-slide images of primary melanomas (86) and nevi (74). We randomly assigned 80% (134) as a training set and built an in-house deep-learning method to allow for classification, at the slide level, of nevi and melanomas. The proposed method performed well on the other 20% (26) test dataset; the accuracy of the slide classification task was 92.3% and our model also performed well in terms of predicting the region of interest annotated by the pathologists, showing excellent performance of our model on melanocytic skin tumors. Even though we tested the experiments on the skin tumor dataset, our work could also be extended to other medical image detection problems to benefit the clinical evaluation and diagnosis of different tumors.

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