QMAIDec 9, 2025

Digital Modeling of Spatial Pathway Activity from Histology Reveals Tumor Microenvironment Heterogeneity

arXiv:2512.09003v1h-index: 9
Originality Synthesis-oriented
AI Analysis

This provides a scalable method for studying tumor microenvironment heterogeneity, but it is incremental as it applies existing computational pathology models to new data.

The researchers tackled the problem of predicting spatial pathway activity from histology images, achieving 87-88% accuracy in mapping TGFb signaling to distinguish tumor from non-tumor regions in breast and lung cancer datasets.

Spatial transcriptomics (ST) enables simultaneous mapping of tissue morphology and spatially resolved gene expression, offering unique opportunities to study tumor microenvironment heterogeneity. Here, we introduce a computational framework that predicts spatial pathway activity directly from hematoxylin-and-eosin-stained histology images at microscale resolution 55 and 100 um. Using image features derived from a computational pathology foundation model, we found that TGFb signaling was the most accurately predicted pathway across three independent breast and lung cancer ST datasets. In 87-88% of reliably predicted cases, the resulting spatial TGFb activity maps reflected the expected contrast between tumor and adjacent non-tumor regions, consistent with the known role of TGFb in regulating interactions within the tumor microenvironment. Notably, linear and nonlinear predictive models performed similarly, suggesting that image features may relate to pathway activity in a predominantly linear fashion or that nonlinear structure is small relative to measurement noise. These findings demonstrate that features extracted from routine histopathology may recover spatially coherent and biologically interpretable pathway patterns, offering a scalable strategy for integrating image-based inference with ST information in tumor microenvironment studies.

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