Deep learning with transfer learning in pathology. Case study: classification of basal cell carcinoma.

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Abstract

Establishing basal cell carcinoma (BCC) subtype is sometimes challenging for pathologists. Deep-learning (DL) algorithms are an emerging approach in image classification due to their performance, accompanied by a new concept – transfer learning, which implies replacing the final layers of a trained network and retraining it for a new task, while keeping the weights from the imported layers. A DL convolution-based software, capable of classifying 10 subtypes of BCC, was designed. Transfer learning from three general-purpose image classification networks (AlexNet, GoogLeNet, and ResNet-18) was used. Three pathologists independently labeled 2249 patches. Ninety percent of data was used for training and 10% for testing on 100 independent training sequences. Each of the resulted networks independently labeled the whole dataset. Mean and standard deviation (SD) accuracy (ACC) [%]∕sensitivity (SN) [%]∕specificity (SP) [%]∕area under the curve (AUC) for all the networks was 82.53±2.63∕72.52±3.63∕97.94±0.3/0.99. The software was validated on another 50-image dataset, and its results are comparable with the result of three pathologists in terms of agreement. All networks had similar classification accuracies, which demonstrated that they reached a maximum classification rate on the dataset. The software shows promising results, and with further development can be successfully used on histological images, assisting pathologists’ diagnosis and teaching.

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