Weakly supervised deep learning for prediction of treatment effectiveness on ovarian cancer from histopathology images.

Journal: Computerized medical imaging and graphics : the official journal of the Computerized Medical Imaging Society
Published Date:

Abstract

Despite the progress made during the last two decades in the surgery and chemotherapy of ovarian cancer, more than 70 % of advanced patients are with recurrent cancer and decease. Surgical debulking of tumors following chemotherapy is the conventional treatment for advanced carcinoma, but patients with such treatment remain at great risk for recurrence and developing drug resistance, and only about 30 % of the women affected will be cured. Bevacizumab is a humanized monoclonal antibody, which blocks VEGF signaling in cancer, inhibits angiogenesis and causes tumor shrinkage, and has been recently approved by FDA as a monotherapy for advanced ovarian cancer in combination with chemotherapy. Considering the cost, potential toxicity, and finding that only a portion of patients will benefit from these drugs, the identification of new predictive method for the treatment of ovarian cancer remains an urgent unmet medical need. In this study, we develop weakly supervised deep learning approaches to accurately predict therapeutic effect for bevacizumab of ovarian cancer patients from histopathological hematoxylin and eosin stained whole slide images, without any pathologist-provided locally annotated regions. To the authors' best knowledge, this is the first model demonstrated to be effective for prediction of the therapeutic effect of patients with epithelial ovarian cancer to bevacizumab. Quantitative evaluation of a whole section dataset shows that the proposed method achieves high accuracy, 0.882 ± 0.06; precision, 0.921 ± 0.04, recall, 0.912 ± 0.03; F-measure, 0.917 ± 0.07 using 5-fold cross validation and outperforms two state-of-the art deep learning approaches Coudray et al. (2018), Campanella et al. (2019). For an independent TMA testing set, the three proposed methods obtain promising results with high recall (sensitivity) 0.946, 0.893 and 0.964, respectively. The results suggest that the proposed method could be useful for guiding treatment by assisting in filtering out patients without positive therapeutic response to suffer from further treatments while keeping patients with positive response in the treatment process. Furthermore, according to the statistical analysis of the Cox Proportional Hazards Model, patients who were predicted to be invalid by the proposed model had a very high risk of cancer recurrence (hazard ratio = 13.727) than patients predicted to be effective with statistical signifcance (p < 0.05).

Authors

  • Ching-Wei Wang
  • Cheng-Chang Chang
    Department of Obstetrics and Gynecology, Tri-Service General Hospital, National Defense Medical Center, Taipei 114, Taiwan.
  • Yu-Ching Lee
    Graduate Institute of Applied Science and Technology, National Taiwan University of Science and Technology, Taipei, Taiwan.
  • Yi-Jia Lin
    Department of Pathology, Tri-Service General Hospital, Taipei, Taiwan.
  • Shih-Chang Lo
    Department of Internal Medicine, Division of Endocrinology and Metabolism, Chung Shan Medical University Hospital, Taichung, Taiwan.
  • Po-Chao Hsu
    Division of Cardiology, Department of Internal Medicine, Kaohsiung Medical University Hospital; ; Department of Internal Medicine, Faculty of Medicine, College of Medicine, Kaohsiung Medical University, Kaohsiung, Taiwan.
  • Yi-An Liou
    Graduate Institute of Biomedical Engineering, National Taiwan University of Science and Technology, Taipei, Taiwan.
  • Chih-Hung Wang
    National Taiwan University Hospital, Department of Emergency Medicine, Taipei, Taiwan.
  • Tai-Kuang Chao
    Department of Pathology, Tri-Service General Hospital, Taipei, Taiwan. chaotai.kuang@msa.hinet.net.