| Literature DB >> 30220773 |
Martin Halicek1,2, James V Little3, Xu Wang4, Zhuo Georgia Chen4, Mihir Patel5,6, Christopher C Griffith3, Mark W El-Deiry5,6, Nabil F Saba4, Amy Y Chen5,6, Baowei Fei1,6,7,8.
Abstract
Hyperspectral imaging (HSI), a non-contact optical imaging technique, has been recently used along with machine learning technique to provide diagnostic information about ex-vivo surgical specimens for optical biopsy. The computer-aided diagnostic approach requires accurate ground truths for both training and validation. This study details a processing pipeline for registering the cancer-normal margin from a digitized histological image to the gross-level HSI of a tissue specimen. Our work incorporates an initial affine and control-point registration followed by a deformable Demons-based registration of the moving mask obtained from the histological image to the fixed mask made from the HS image. To assess registration quality, Dice similarity coefficient (DSC) measures the image overlap, visual inspection is used to evaluate the margin, and average target registration error (TRE) of needle-bored holes measures the registration error between the histologic and HSI images. Excised tissue samples from seventeen patients, 11 head and neck squamous cell carcinoma (HNSCCa) and 6 thyroid carcinoma, were registered according to the proposed method. Three registered specimens are illustrated in this paper, which demonstrate the efficacy of the registration workflow. Further work is required to apply the technique to more patient data and investigate the ability of this procedure to produce suitable gold standards for machine learning validation.Entities:
Keywords: Demons registration; Hyperspectral imaging; digital histology; head and neck cancer surgery
Year: 2018 PMID: 30220773 PMCID: PMC6138464 DOI: 10.1117/12.2293165
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Proc SPIE Int Soc Opt Eng ISSN: 0277-786X