4.6 Article

Deep Learning-Based Computational Cytopathologic Diagnosis of Metastatic Breast Carcinoma in Pleural Fluid

Journal

CELLS
Volume 12, Issue 14, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/cells12141847

Keywords

breast neoplasms; cytology; pleural fluid; artificial intelligence; metastasis; deep learning

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This study evaluates the diagnostic accuracy of an artificial intelligence-based model in detecting malignant pleural effusion cytology associated with breast cancer. The deep convolutional neural network model (DCNN) outperforms pathologists in terms of accuracy, sensitivity, and specificity. The study highlights the potential of DCNN to support pathologists in diagnosing malignant pleural effusion cytology.
A Pleural effusion cytology is vital for treating metastatic breast cancer; however, concerns have arisen regarding the low accuracy and inter-observer variability in cytologic diagnosis. Although artificial intelligence-based image analysis has shown promise in cytopathology research, its application in diagnosing breast cancer in pleural fluid remains unexplored. To overcome these limitations, we evaluate the diagnostic accuracy of an artificial intelligence-based model using a large collection of cytopathological slides, to detect the malignant pleural effusion cytology associated with breast cancer. This study includes a total of 569 cytological slides of malignant pleural effusion of metastatic breast cancer from various institutions. We extracted 34,221 augmented image patches from whole-slide images and trained and validated a deep convolutional neural network model (DCNN) (Inception-ResNet-V2) with the images. Using this model, we classified 845 randomly selected patches, which were reviewed by three pathologists to compare their accuracy. The DCNN model outperforms the pathologists by demonstrating higher accuracy, sensitivity, and specificity compared to the pathologists (81.1% vs. 68.7%, 95.0% vs. 72.5%, and 98.6% vs. 88.9%, respectively). The pathologists reviewed the discordant cases of DCNN. After re-examination, the average accuracy, sensitivity, and specificity of the pathologists improved to 87.9, 80.2, and 95.7%, respectively. This study shows that DCNN can accurately diagnose malignant pleural effusion cytology in breast cancer and has the potential to support pathologists.

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