CoNIC Challenge: Pushing the frontiers of nuclear detection, segmentation, classification and counting
Publikation: Beitrag in Fachzeitschrift › Kurze Umfrage/Übersichtsartikel › Beigetragen › Begutachtung
Beitragende
- University of Warwick
- Histofy Ltd
- École Polytechnique Fédérale de Lausanne
- The University of Hong Kong
- Tencent
- Sichuan University
- Tsinghua University
- Max-Delbrück-Centrum für Molekulare Medizin (MDC)
- Humboldt-Universität zu Berlin
- Charité – Universitätsmedizin Berlin
- Universität Bern
- University of Cambridge
- Chinese University of Hong Kong
- Softsensor.ai
- PRR.ai
- Arontier Co.
- Mohamed Bin Zayed University of Artificial Intelligence
- Université de Tours
- Université de Strasbourg
- Centre national de la recherche scientifique (CNRS)
- INSERM - Institut national de la santé et de la recherche médicale
- Karlsruher Institut für Technologie
- South China University of Technology
- University Hospitals Coventry and Warwickshire NHS Trust
Abstract
Nuclear detection, segmentation and morphometric profiling are essential in helping us further understand the relationship between histology and patient outcome. To drive innovation in this area, we setup a community-wide challenge using the largest available dataset of its kind to assess nuclear segmentation and cellular composition. Our challenge, named CoNIC, stimulated the development of reproducible algorithms for cellular recognition with real-time result inspection on public leaderboards. We conducted an extensive post-challenge analysis based on the top-performing models using 1,658 whole-slide images of colon tissue. With around 700 million detected nuclei per model, associated features were used for dysplasia grading and survival analysis, where we demonstrated that the challenge's improvement over the previous state-of-the-art led to significant boosts in downstream performance. Our findings also suggest that eosinophils and neutrophils play an important role in the tumour microevironment. We release challenge models and WSI-level results to foster the development of further methods for biomarker discovery.
Details
| Originalsprache | Englisch |
|---|---|
| Aufsatznummer | 103047 |
| Fachzeitschrift | Medical Image Analysis |
| Jahrgang | 92 |
| Publikationsstatus | Veröffentlicht - Feb. 2024 |
| Peer-Review-Status | Ja |
| Extern publiziert | Ja |
Externe IDs
| PubMed | 38157647 |
|---|---|
| ORCID | /0000-0002-7780-9057/work/176863471 |
Schlagworte
ASJC Scopus Sachgebiete
Schlagwörter
- Computational pathology, Deep learning, Nuclear recognition