Digital Pathology and Tissue-based Diagnosis
Transcription
Digital Pathology and Tissue-based Diagnosis
Digital Pathology and Tissue-based Diagnosis. How do they differ? P. Hufnagl Institute of Pathology (Rudolf-Virchow-Haus). Humboldt University, Berlin ? 10.12.2014 Institute of Pathology – Charité Berlin 1 Structure of the talk • Possible workflow • routine diagnostic • diagnostic support • Which scanner? • Quantification / image analysis • Conclusions 10.12.2014 Institute of Pathology – Charité Berlin 2 Structure of the talk • Possible workflow • routine diagnostic • diagnostic support • Which scanner can we trust? • Quantification / image analysis • Conclusions 10.12.2014 Institute of Pathology – Charité Berlin 3 The Conventional Workflow Tissue Lab: Cutting, Staining, Coverslip Clinical request PLIMS HIS Report 10.12.2014 Physician: Dictation, Images, Annotation Physician: Assignment, diagnosing, consultation Institute of Pathology – Charité Berlin 4 The Digital Workflow Tissue Lab: Cutting, Staining, Coverslip Slide Scanner: Registration, Digitalisation PACS: Storage, Image streaming Clinical request PLIMS HIS Report 10.12.2014 Physician: Dictation, Images, Annotation Physician: Assignment, diagnosing, consultation Institute of Pathology – Charité Berlin Image analysis: marker quantification 5 The Digital Workflow Missing link between cover slipper and scanner Tissue Lab: Cutting, Staining, Coverslip Slide Scanner: Missing link between Registration, scanner and PLIS Digitalisation PACS: Storage, Image streaming Clinical request PLIMS HIS Report 10.12.2014 Physician: Dictation, Images, Annotation Physician: Assignment, diagnosing, consultation Institute of Pathology – Charité Berlin Image analysis: marker quantification 6 Advantages of Virtual Microscopy User Viewer Slide Server Slide Scanner • No glass transportation, no glass archive (?) • Previous slides are always available • Microscopic diagnostic - anytime – anywhere • Parallel viewing of different stainings, positions • Viewing and handling parallel at different locations • Facilitated second opinion - online • Quantification and image analysis just in time • Annotations are simple to be handled • much more ….. 10.12.2014 Institute of Pathology – Charité Berlin 7 Problems of the digital workflow Disadvantages • Additional process step: Digitalisation • Huge and continuous hardware and software investments • Training of personnel • Diagnosis on the monitor is unfamiliar for pathologists • Legal Problems 10.12.2014 Institute of Pathology – Charité Berlin 8 Strategy • Start with a less critical application • Biobanking • Introduce VM to applications with most effects • Tumour board • Second opinion in-house • Solve all problems along the workflow • LIMS integration • Sure barcode identification • Establishing of continuous testing 10.12.2014 Institute of Pathology – Charité Berlin 9 ZEBANC – CHARITÉ BIOBANK CVK CCM CBF Institute of Pathology – Charité Berlin CURRENTLY OFFERED SERVICES Aliquotation Quality documentation (SPREC) WSI generation TMA generation and WSI * based analysis Automatic DNA - extraction DNA Sequencing .... *whole slide image Institute of Pathology – Charité Berlin 11 VALUE OF A SAMPLE Clinical Data Whole Slide Images Quantification of Morphology Next Generation Sequencing Data Data generated during experiments ...... Institute of Pathology – Charité Berlin VALUE Sample ZEBANC AND VM Digitalisation established for samples from frozen section labs Technical quality control implemented Infrastructure for block-centric navigation established Medical quality control in use (prototype tumor area detection) TMA as sample array in CentraXX integrated Several quantification procedures implemented to generate additional sample features Virtual studies on virtual slides instead of real samples Virtual microscopy has a huge potential for ser vices in the context of a biomaterial bank Institute of Pathology – Charité Berlin Clinical Pathology Second Opinion, Studies, Marker Quantification Medical Workstation - All Information in One View 10.12.2014 Institute of Pathology – Charité Berlin 14 Workflow of Tumor Board Meetings Set bookmarks and make annotations Browse slides and move to annotations Before meeting 10.12.2014 On meeting Institute of Pathology – Charité Berlin 15 Quantification 10.12.2014 Institute of Pathology – Charité Berlin 16 Structure of the talk • Possible workflow • routine diagnostic • diagnostic support • Which scanner? • Quantification / image analysis • Conclusions 10.12.2014 Institute of Pathology – Charité Berlin 17 Requirements on Slide Scanning • Correct slide information is present • Completeness of tissue • Image sharpness • Color fidelity 10.12.2014 Institute of Pathology – Charité Berlin 18 VIRTUAL MICROSCOPY – SCANNER CONTEST P. Hufnagl1,2, N.Zerbe2 1University 2Institute of Applied Science Berlin, Berlin, German for Pathology, Charité Berlin, Germany 2nd International Scanner Contest technology meets pathology 2nd International Scanner Contest technology meets pathology MISSION Determination of the state of the art in slide scanning Support of pathologists and scientists to find the appropriate scanner for their applications Support of vendors to understand the needs of pathologists Determination of „quality of WSI“ within the context of pathology Development of a set of standard features for the characterization and comparison of scanning devices Institute of Pathology – Charité Berlin 2nd International Scanner Contest technology meets pathology DISCIPLINES High Throughput Quality Fluorescence Image Analysis Technical Institute of Pathology – Charité Berlin 2nd International Scanner Contest technology meets pathology QUALIT Y | EVALUATION TERMINALS Institute of Pathology – Charité Berlin 2nd International Scanner Contest technology meets pathology VENDORS…. Institute of Pathology – Charité Berlin 2nd International Scanner Contest technology meets pathology TECHNICAL – COLOUR & GEOMETRY | AIMS & MATERIAL Aims: Measurement of colour fidelity and colour resolution of devices Determination of true effective pixel size Detection of image distortions Material: IT8.7/1 Colour Target mounted on glas slide 264 colour & 24 grey value fields known absorption spectra and colourimetric coordinates Grid pattern glas slide overall size: 1” x 3” (25mm x 75mm) image area: 20mm x 50mm clear aperture: 8.5 µm² opaque lines: 1.5 µm² pitch: 10 µm Institute of Pathology – Charité Berlin 2nd International Scanner Contest technology meets pathology TECHNICAL – COLOUR & GEOMETRY | TASK General Conditions: All participants had to scan the same slide Any manual interaction was allowed Rescan of slide was allowed 1h time limit Evaluation: Colour difference calculation to CIEDE2000 average inside middle 50% of each field low-resolution scan Measurements inside whole slide images Inside sensor field (no stitching) 9 sensor fields – 18 measurements each Institute of Pathology – Charité Berlin 2nd International Scanner Contest technology meets pathology TECHNICAL – COLOUR | TEST METHOD Fidelity test: average dE over 144 fields dE avg = Σ dE(c * mes , c ref ) /144 mix-colours matrix for fidelity test Colour difference calculation to CIEDE2000 colour step wedges Institute of Pathology – Charité Berlin 2nd International Scanner Contest technology meets pathology TECHNICAL – COLOUR | SOFTWARE Institute of Pathology – Charité Berlin 2nd International Scanner Contest technology meets pathology COMPLETENESS OF SCAN Institute of Pathology – Charité Berlin 2nd International Scanner Contest technology meets pathology HIGH THROUGHPUT | AIMS & MATERIAL Institute of Pathology – Charité Berlin 29 2nd International Scanner Contest technology meets pathology HIGH THROUGHPUT | AIMS & MATERIAL Institute of Pathology – Charité Berlin 30 2nd International Scanner Contest technology meets pathology DIGITALISATION - SCANMASTER Sample identifikation (barcode / OCR) Sharpness assessment + Completeness of particles Institute of Pathology – Charité Berlin 2nd International Scanner Contest technology meets pathology FOCUS QUALIT Y ASSESSMENT Green: quality sufficiant Red: not sharp, possible artefacts Institute of Pathology – Charité Berlin Institute of Pathology – Charité Berlin 2nd International Scanner Contest technology meets pathology Institute of Pathology – Charité Berlin 2nd International Scanner Contest technology meets pathology VIEWING ON A VIRTUAL MICROSCOPE 2nd International Scanner Contest technology meets pathology RESOLUTION MAGNIFICATION IS NOT RESOLUTION AND OPTICAL RESOLUTION IS NOT DIGITAL RESOLUTION ! Institute of Pathology – Charité Berlin Several Positions in Test Leap Motion over the table Leap Motion under acryl glass pane 10.12.2014 Institute of Pathology – Charité Berlin 37 Leap Motion Stereo imaging based on infrared cameras (https://www.leapmotion.com/) 10.12.2014 Institute of Pathology – Charité Berlin 38 Handling 10.12.2014 Possible workflow Institute of Pathology – Charité Berlin 39 Gesture Control Next/ previous slide 10.12.2014 Institute of Pathology – Charité Berlin Zoom in/ out 40 Histological Image Registration • • • • • • Goal – Inter-Modal Registration (Stain-To-Stain) Applications – WSI Navigation Support – Virtual Staining – 3D Reconstruction Approach – Intensity Based – Multi-Resolution Similarity Measure – Mutual Information Transformation Models – Rigid: Rotation + Translation – Affine: Linear Transformation + Translation – Free Form Deformation: B-Splines Optimization – Gradient Descent 10.12.2014 Institute of Pathology – Charité Berlin 41 Registration Of Renal Images: Reference Image (H&E) Template Image (SFOG) 10.12.2014 Institute of Pathology – Charité Berlin 42 10.12.2014 Reference Image (H&E) Institute of Pathology – Charité Berlin 43 10.12.2014 Template Image (SFOG) Institute of Pathology – Charité Berlin 44 Coarse to Fine Image Registration: Rigid, Affine, Free Form Model 10.12.2014 Institute of Pathology – Charité Berlin 45 10.12.2014 Rigid Registration Institute of Pathology – Charité Berlin 46 10.12.2014 Affine Registration Institute of Pathology – Charité Berlin 47 10.12.2014 Free Form Registration Institute of Pathology – Charité Berlin 48 10.12.2014 Reference Image Institute of Pathology – Charité Berlin 49 Structure of the talk • Possible workflow • routine diagnostic • diagnostic support • Which scanner? • Quantification / image analysis • Conclusion 10.12.2014 Institute of Pathology – Charité Berlin 50 The strong reputation of pathology is becoming weaker ..… … if trust is gone, you almost never get it back …. 10.12.2014 Institute of Pathology – Charité Berlin 51 Standardized Quantification in Tumor Pathology Nat J Inst., preprint November 2013 10.12.2014 Institute of Pathology – Charité Berlin 52 …. At the St. Gallen cutoff of 13.5 % there are 32.3 % high Ki67 by Lab A while Lab B would call the same cases low Ki67. .. 10.12.2014 Institute of Pathology – Charité Berlin 53 Optical Illusions Not always funny, sometimes really critical… 10.12.2014 Institute of Pathology – Charité Berlin 54 Human brain: Square a is lighter than square b ! Reality: Both are identical 10.12.2014 Institute of Pathology – Charité Berlin 55 Simulated Ki67 15% 225 100 400 625 900 10.12.2014 Institute of Pathology – Charité Berlin 56 Estimation of variation of Ki67 scoring 10.12.2014 Institute of Pathology – Charité Berlin 57 FEATURE BASED MULTIRESOLUTION CORRESPONDENCE Combined tumor annotations Individual tumor annotations Annotated as tumor by 10 pathologists tumor By 4 pathologists non-tumor By 2 pathologists by no pathologist Institute of Pathology – Charité Berlin CLASSIFICATION RESULTS Gastric Cancer (HER2) Transmission to HE Institute of Pathology – Charité Berlin Learning Sample 59 Structure of the talk • Possible workflow • routine diagnostic • diagnostic support • Which scanner? • Quantification / image analysis • Conclusions 10.12.2014 Institute of Pathology – Charité Berlin 60 Summary on Relevance of VM • Workflow • routine diagnostic In routine path not yet active on a broad level • diagnostic support Excellent instruments exist, but they have to be integrated properly • Which scanner? • Quantification / image analysis Will become very important in personalized medicine • • Clinical-pathological tumorconferences (tumor board) Biobanking 10.12.2014 Is already very important Is important in research institutions Institute of Pathology – Charité Berlin 61 Most important requirements on VM • Clinical data (LIMS) are correctly connected to WSI • Completeness of tissue • Image sharpness • Color fidelity • Compression is adequate • Resolution and quality of the monitor is sufficiant • Test continously! 10.12.2014 Institute of Pathology – Charité Berlin 62 Let‘s go virtual 13th European Conference on Digital Pathology Berlin May 25. / 26. 2016 www.digitalpathology2016.org 10.12.2014 Institute of Pathology – Charité Berlin 63 Acknowledgement Team Norman Zerbe, Karsten Schlüns, Sebastian Lohmann, Mario Domhardt, Björn Lindequist, Daniel Heim, Stephan Wienert, Kai Saeger, Thorsten Knape, Arend Müller, Wolfram Schädel, Uwe Brunner, Thomas Schrader, Manfred Dietel 2nd International Scanner Contest technology meets pathology Institute of Pathology – Charité Berlin
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