4.6 Article

Registration of presurgical MRI and histopathology images from radical prostatectomy via RAPSODI

Journal

MEDICAL PHYSICS
Volume 47, Issue 9, Pages 4177-4188

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1002/mp.14337

Keywords

cancer labels; histopathology; MRI; prostate cancer; registration

Funding

  1. Department of Radiology, Stanford University
  2. NIH [5T32 EB009653]
  3. Training in Biomedical Imaging Instrumentation at Stanford
  4. Mark and Mary Stevens Interdisciplinary Graduate Fellowship, Wu Tsai Neuroscience Institute

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Purpose Magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) has great potential to improve prostate cancer diagnosis; however, subtle differences between cancer and confounding conditions render prostate MRI interpretation challenging. The tissue collected from patients who undergo radical prostatectomy provides a unique opportunity to correlate histopathology images of the prostate with preoperative MRI to accurately map the extent of cancer from histopathology images onto MRI. We seek to develop an open-source, easy-to-use platform to align presurgical MRI and histopathology images of resected prostates in patients who underwent radical prostatectomy to create accurate cancer labels on MRI. Methods Here, we introduceRAdiologyPathologySpatialOpen-Source multi-DimensionalIntegration (RAPSODI), the first open-source framework for the registration of radiology and pathology images. RAPSODI relies on three steps. First, it creates a three-dimensional (3D) reconstruction of the histopathology specimen as a digital representation of the tissue before gross sectioning. Second, RAPSODI registers corresponding histopathology and MRI slices. Third, the optimized transforms are applied to the cancer regions outlined on the histopathology images to project those labels onto the preoperative MRI. Results We tested RAPSODI in a phantom study where we simulated various conditions, for example, tissue shrinkage during fixation. Our experiments showed that RAPSODI can reliably correct multiple artifacts. We also evaluated RAPSODI in 157 patients from three institutions that underwent radical prostatectomy and have very different pathology processing and scanning. RAPSODI was evaluated in 907 corresponding histpathology-MRI slices and achieved a Dice coefficient of 0.97 +/- 0.01 for the prostate, a Hausdorff distance of 1.99 +/- 0.70 mm for the prostate boundary, a urethra deviation of 3.09 +/- 1.45 mm, and a landmark deviation of 2.80 +/- 0.59 mm between registered histopathology images and MRI. Conclusion Our robust framework successfully mapped the extent of cancer from histopathology slices onto MRI providing labels from training machine learning methods to detect cancer on MRI.

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