ADD ANI AS A TRUSTED SOURCE
googleads
Menu
Health

New digital weapon in fight against breast cancer

Washington D.C. [USA], May 11 (ANI): A deep-learning computer network has been developed that can accurately identify and delineate breast cancers on the digital tissue slides.

ANI May 11, 2017 14:09 IST googleads

New digital weapon in fight against breast cancer
Washington D.C. [USA], May 11 (ANI): A deep-learning computer network has been developed that can accurately identify and delineate breast cancers on the digital tissue slides. The network developed through research led by Case Western Reserve University was 100 percent accurate in determining whether invasive forms of breast cancer were present in whole biopsy slides. Looking closer, the network correctly made the same determination in each individual pixel of the slide 97 percent of the time, rendering near-exact delineations of the tumours. Compared to the analyses of four pathologists, the machine was more consistent and accurate, in many cases improving on their delineations. In a field where time and accuracy can be critical to a patient's long-term prognosis, the study is a step toward automating part of biopsy analysis and improving the efficiency of the process, the researchers said. Currently, cancer is present in one in 10 biopsies ordered by physicians, but all must be analyzed by pathologists to identify the extent and volume of the disease, determine if it has spread and whether the patient has an aggressive or indolent cancer and needs chemotherapy or a less drastic treatment. "If the network can tell which patients have cancer and which do not, this technology can serve as triage for the pathologist, freeing their time to concentrate on the cancer patients," said co-author Anant Madabushi. To train the deep-learning network, the researchers downloaded 400 biopsy images from multiple hospitals. Each slide was approximately 50,000 x 50,000 pixels. The computer navigated through or rectified the inconsistencies of different scanners, staining processes and protocols used by each site, to identify features in cancer versus the rest of the tissue. The researchers then presented the network with 200 images from The Cancer Genome Atlas and University Hospitals Cleveland Medical Center. The network scored 100 percent on determining the presence or absence of cancer on whole slides and nearly as high per pixel. Network training took about two weeks, and identifying the presence and exact location of cancer in the 200 slides took about 20 to 25 minutes each. That was done two years ago. Madabhushi suspects training now, with new computer architecture, would take less than a day, and cancer identification and delineation could be done in less than a minute per slide. "To put this in perspective," Madabhushi said, "the machine could do the analysis during 'off hours,' possibly running the analysis during the night and providing the results ready for review by the pathologist when she/he were to come into the office in the morning." The study is published in Scientific Reports. (ANI)

Get the App

What to Read Next

Health

Scientists solve a major roadblock in cancer cell therapy: Study 

Scientists solve a major roadblock in cancer cell therapy: Study 

Researchers have found a reliable way to grow helper T cells from stem cells, solving a major challenge in immune-based cancer therapy. Helper T cells act as the immune system's coordinators, helping other immune cells fight longer and harder.

Read More
Health

Injection turns sleeping tumour immune cells into cancer fighters

Injection turns sleeping tumour immune cells into cancer fighters

The Korea Advanced Institute of Science and Technology (KAIST) researchers have developed a way to reprogram immune cells already inside tumours into cancer-killing machines.

Read More
Health

High-fat diets give liver cancer a dangerous head start: Study

High-fat diets give liver cancer a dangerous head start: Study

A high-fat diet does more than overload the liver with fat. New research from MIT shows that prolonged exposure to fatty foods can push liver cells into a survival mode that quietly raises the risk of cancer.

Read More
Health

Researchers have decoded rare cancer fighting plant compound

Researchers have decoded rare cancer fighting plant compound

UBC Okanagan researchers have uncovered how plants create mitraphylline, a rare natural compound linked to anti-cancer effects.

Read More
Health

Air pollution may reduce health benefits of exercise: Study

Air pollution may reduce health benefits of exercise: Study

A new study led by researchers at University College London (UCL) shows that chronic exposure to toxic air can significantly diminish the health benefits of regular physical activity.

Read More
Home About Us Our Products Advertise Contact Us Terms & Condition Privacy Policy

Copyright © aninews.in | All Rights Reserved.