TriDeNT : Triple deep network training for privileged knowledge distillation in histopathology.

Journal: Medical image analysis
PMID:

Abstract

Computational pathology models rarely utilise data that will not be available for inference. This means most models cannot learn from highly informative data such as additional immunohistochemical (IHC) stains and spatial transcriptomics. We present TriDeNT , a novel self-supervised method for utilising privileged data that is not available during inference to improve performance. We demonstrate the efficacy of this method for a range of different paired data including immunohistochemistry, spatial transcriptomics and expert nuclei annotations. In all settings, TriDeNT outperforms other state-of-the-art methods in downstream tasks, with observed improvements of up to 101%. Furthermore, we provide qualitative and quantitative measurements of the features learned by these models and how they differ from baselines. TriDeNT offers a novel method to distil knowledge from scarce or costly data during training, to create significantly better models for routine inputs.

Authors

  • Lucas Farndale
    School of Cancer Sciences, University of Glasgow, Scotland, UK; Cancer Research UK Scotland Institute, Scotland, UK; School of Computing Science, University of Glasgow, Scotland, UK; School of Mathematics and Statistics, University of Glasgow, Scotland, UK. Electronic address: lucas.farndale@glasgow.ac.uk.
  • Robert Insall
    School of Cancer Sciences, University of Glasgow, Scotland, UK; Cancer Research UK Scotland Institute, Scotland, UK; Division of Biosciences, University College London, England, UK.
  • Ke Yuan
    Department of Biomedical Engineering, The Chinese University of Hong Kong, Shatin, N.T., Hong Kong.