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Artificial intelligence for diagnosis and Gleason grading of prostate cancer: the PANDA challenge

Artificial intelligence (AI) has shown promise for diagnosing prostate cancer in biopsies. However, results have been limited to individual studies, lacking validation in multinational settings. Competitions have been shown to be accelerators for medical imaging innovations, but their impact is hind...

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Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Bulten, Wouter, Kartasalo, Kimmo, Chen, Po-Hsuan Cameron, Ström, Peter, Pinckaers, Hans, Nagpal, Kunal, Cai, Yuannan, Steiner, David F., van Boven, Hester, Vink, Robert, Hulsbergen-van de Kaa, Christina, van der Laak, Jeroen, Amin, Mahul B., Evans, Andrew J., van der Kwast, Theodorus, Allan, Robert, Humphrey, Peter A., Grönberg, Henrik, Samaratunga, Hemamali, Delahunt, Brett, Tsuzuki, Toyonori, Häkkinen, Tomi, Egevad, Lars, Demkin, Maggie, Dane, Sohier, Tan, Fraser, Valkonen, Masi, Corrado, Greg S., Peng, Lily, Mermel, Craig H., Ruusuvuori, Pekka, Litjens, Geert, Eklund, Martin
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Nature Publishing Group US 2022
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8799467/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/35027755
http://dx.doi.org/10.1038/s41591-021-01620-2
Descripción
Sumario:Artificial intelligence (AI) has shown promise for diagnosing prostate cancer in biopsies. However, results have been limited to individual studies, lacking validation in multinational settings. Competitions have been shown to be accelerators for medical imaging innovations, but their impact is hindered by lack of reproducibility and independent validation. With this in mind, we organized the PANDA challenge—the largest histopathology competition to date, joined by 1,290 developers—to catalyze development of reproducible AI algorithms for Gleason grading using 10,616 digitized prostate biopsies. We validated that a diverse set of submitted algorithms reached pathologist-level performance on independent cross-continental cohorts, fully blinded to the algorithm developers. On United States and European external validation sets, the algorithms achieved agreements of 0.862 (quadratically weighted κ, 95% confidence interval (CI), 0.840–0.884) and 0.868 (95% CI, 0.835–0.900) with expert uropathologists. Successful generalization across different patient populations, laboratories and reference standards, achieved by a variety of algorithmic approaches, warrants evaluating AI-based Gleason grading in prospective clinical trials.