Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: http://cmuir.cmu.ac.th/jspui/handle/6653943832/71594
Title: Radio-pathomic mapping model generated using annotations from five pathologists reliably distinguishes high-grade prostate cancer
Authors: Sean D. McGarry
John D. Bukowy
Kenneth A. Iczkowski
Allison K. Lowman
Michael Brehler
Samuel Bobholz
Andrew Nencka
Alex Barrington
Kenneth Jacobsohn
Jackson Unteriner
Petar Duvnjak
Michael Griffin
Mark Hohenwalter
Tucker Keuter
Wei Huang
Tatjana Antic
Gladell Paner
Watchareepohn Palangmonthip
Anjishnu Banerjee
Peter S. LaViolette
Authors: Sean D. McGarry
John D. Bukowy
Kenneth A. Iczkowski
Allison K. Lowman
Michael Brehler
Samuel Bobholz
Andrew Nencka
Alex Barrington
Kenneth Jacobsohn
Jackson Unteriner
Petar Duvnjak
Michael Griffin
Mark Hohenwalter
Tucker Keuter
Wei Huang
Tatjana Antic
Gladell Paner
Watchareepohn Palangmonthip
Anjishnu Banerjee
Peter S. LaViolette
Keywords: Medicine
Issue Date: 1-Sep-2020
Abstract: © The Authors. Purpose: Our study predictively maps epithelium density in magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) space while varying the ground truth labels provided by five pathologists to quantify the downstream effects of interobserver variability. Approach: Clinical imaging and postsurgical tissue from 48 recruited prospective patients were used in our study. Tissue was sliced to match the MRI orientation and whole-mount slides were stained and digitized. Data from 28 patients (n ¼ 33 slides) were sent to five pathologists to be annotated. Slides from the remaining 20 patients (n ¼ 123 slides) were annotated by one of the five pathologists. Interpathologist variability was measured using Krippendorff’s alpha. Pathologist-specific radiopathomic mapping models were trained using a partial least-squares regression using MRI values to predict epithelium density, a known marker for disease severity. An analysis of variance characterized intermodel means difference in epithelium density. A consensus model was created and evaluated using a receiver operator characteristic classifying high grade versus low grade and benign, and was statistically compared to apparent diffusion coefficient (ADC). Results: Interobserver variability ranged from low to acceptable agreement (0.31 to 0.69). There was a statistically significant difference in mean predicted epithelium density values (p < 0.001) between the five models. The consensus model outperformed ADC (areas under the curve = 0.80 and 0.71, respectively, p < 0.05). Conclusion: We demonstrate that radiopathomic maps of epithelium density are sensitive to the pathologist annotating the dataset; however, it is unclear if these differences are clinically significant. The consensus model produced the best maps, matched the performance of the best individual model, and outperformed ADC.
URI: https://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?partnerID=HzOxMe3b&scp=85096616055&origin=inward
http://cmuir.cmu.ac.th/jspui/handle/6653943832/71594
ISSN: 23294310
23294302
Appears in Collections:CMUL: Journal Articles

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