VENet: Variational energy network for gland segmentation of pathological images and early gastric cancer diagnosis of whole slide images.

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Abstract

Gland segmentation of pathological images is an essential but challenging step for adenocarcinoma diagnosis. Although deep learning methods have recently made tremendous progress in gland segmentation, they have not given satisfactory boundary and region segmentation results of adjacent glands. These glands usually have a large difference in glandular appearance, and the statistical distribution between the training and test sets in deep learning is inconsistent. These problems make networks not generalize well in the test dataset, bringing difficulties to gland segmentation and early cancer diagnosis.To address these problems, we propose a Variational Energy Network named VENet with a traditional variational energy Lv loss for gland segmentation of pathological images and early gastric cancer detection in whole slide images (WSIs). It effectively integrates the variational mathematical model and the data-adaptability of deep learning methods to balance boundary and region segmentation. Furthermore, it can effectively segment and classify glands in large-size WSIs with reliable nucleus width and nucleus-to-cytoplasm ratio features.The VENet was evaluated on the 2015 MICCAI Gland Segmentation challenge (GlaS) dataset, the Colorectal Adenocarcinoma Glands (CRAG) dataset, and the self-collected Nanfang Hospital dataset. Compared with state-of-the-art methods, our method achieved excellent performance for GlaS Test A (object dice 0.9562, object F1 0.9271, object Hausdorff distance 73.13), GlaS Test B (object dice 94.95, object F1 95.60, object Hausdorff distance 59.63), and CRAG (object dice 95.08, object F1 92.94, object Hausdorff distance 28.01). For the Nanfang Hospital dataset, our method achieved a kappa of 0.78, an accuracy of 0.9, a sensitivity of 0.98, and a specificity of 0.80 on the classification task of test 69 WSIs.The experimental results show that the proposed model accurately predicts boundaries and outperforms state-of-the-art methods. It can be applied to the early diagnosis of gastric cancer by detecting regions of high-grade gastric intraepithelial neoplasia in WSI, which can assist pathologists in analyzing large WSI and making accurate diagnostic decisions.Copyright © 2024 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.

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