BRACS: A Dataset for BReAst Carcinoma Subtyping in H&E Histology Images.

Journal: Database : the journal of biological databases and curation
Published Date:

Abstract

Breast cancer is the most commonly diagnosed cancer and registers the highest number of deaths for women. Advances in diagnostic activities combined with large-scale screening policies have significantly lowered the mortality rates for breast cancer patients. However, the manual inspection of tissue slides by pathologists is cumbersome, time-consuming and is subject to significant inter- and intra-observer variability. Recently, the advent of whole-slide scanning systems has empowered the rapid digitization of pathology slides and enabled the development of Artificial Intelligence (AI)-assisted digital workflows. However, AI techniques, especially Deep Learning, require a large amount of high-quality annotated data to learn from. Constructing such task-specific datasets poses several challenges, such as data-acquisition level constraints, time-consuming and expensive annotations and anonymization of patient information. In this paper, we introduce the BReAst Carcinoma Subtyping (BRACS) dataset, a large cohort of annotated Hematoxylin and Eosin (H&E)-stained images to advance AI development in the automatic characterization of breast lesions. BRACS contains 547 Whole-Slide Images (WSIs) and 4539 Regions Of Interest (ROIs) extracted from the WSIs. Each WSI and respective ROIs are annotated by the consensus of three board-certified pathologists into different lesion categories. Specifically, BRACS includes three lesion types, i.e., benign, malignant and atypical, which are further subtyped into seven categories. It is, to the best of our knowledge, the largest annotated dataset for breast cancer subtyping both at WSI and ROI levels. Furthermore, by including the understudied atypical lesions, BRACS offers a unique opportunity for leveraging AI to better understand their characteristics. We encourage AI practitioners to develop and evaluate novel algorithms on the BRACS dataset to further breast cancer diagnosis and patient care. Database URL: https://www.bracs.icar.cnr.it/.

Authors

  • Nadia Brancati
    Institute for High Performance Computing and Networking, National Research Council of Italy (ICAR-CNR), Naples, Italy.
  • Anna Maria Anniciello
    National Cancer Institute - IRCCS-Fondazione Pascale, Naples, Italy.
  • Pushpak Pati
  • Daniel Riccio
    Institute for High Performance Computing and Networking, National Research Council of Italy (ICAR-CNR), Naples, Italy; University of Naples "Federico II", Naples, Italy.
  • Giosue Scognamiglio
    National Cancer Institute - IRCCS-Fondazione Pascale, Naples, Italy.
  • Guillaume Jaume
    IBM Zurich Research Lab, Zurich, Switzerland; Signal Processing Laboratory 5, EPFL, Lausanne, Switzerland.
  • Giuseppe De Pietro
    Institute of High-Performance Computing and Networking (ICAR)-National Research Council of Italy (CNR) 80131 Naples Italy.
  • Maurizio Di Bonito
    National Cancer Institute - IRCCS-Fondazione Pascale, Naples, Italy.
  • Antonio Foncubierta
    IBM Research - Säumerstrasse 4, 8803 Rüschlikon, Zurich, Switzerland.
  • Gerardo Botti
    National Cancer Institute - IRCCS-Fondazione Pascale, Naples, Italy.
  • Maria Gabrani
    IBM Research - Zurich, Switzerland.
  • Florinda Feroce
    National Cancer Institute - IRCCS-Fondazione Pascale, Naples, Italy.
  • Maria Frucci
    Institute for High Performance Computing and Networking, National Research Council of Italy (ICAR-CNR), Naples, Italy.