Predicting early breast cancer recurrence from histopathological images in the Carolina Breast Cancer Study

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Abstract

Approaches for rapidly identifying patients at high risk of early breast cancer recurrence are needed. Image-based methods for prescreening hematoxylin and eosin (H&E) stained tumor slides could offer temporal and financial efficiency. We evaluated a data set of 704 1-mm tumor core H&E images (2–4 cores per case), corresponding to 202 participants (101 who recurred; 101 non-recurrent matched on age and follow-up time) from breast cancers diagnosed between 2008–2012 in the Carolina Breast Cancer Study. We leveraged deep learning to extract image information and trained a model to identify recurrence. Cross-validation accuracy for predicting recurrence was 62.4% [95% CI: 55.7, 69.1], similar to grade (65.8% [95% CI: 59.3, 72.3]) and ER status (66.3% [95% CI: 59.8, 72.8]). Interestingly, 70% (19/27) of early-recurrent low-intermediate grade tumors were identified by our image model. Relative to existing markers, image-based analyses provide complementary information for predicting early recurrence.

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Shi, Y., Olsson, L. T., Hoadley, K. A., Calhoun, B. C., Marron, J. S., Geradts, J., … Troester, M. A. (2023). Predicting early breast cancer recurrence from histopathological images in the Carolina Breast Cancer Study. Npj Breast Cancer, 9(1). https://doi.org/10.1038/s41523-023-00597-0

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