An active learning approach for rapid characterization of endothelial cells in human tumors Journal Article


Authors: Padmanabhan, R. K.; Somasundar, V. H.; Griffith, S. D.; Zhu, J.; Samoyedny, D.; Tan, K. S.; Hu, J.; Liao, X.; Carin, L.; Yoon, S. S.; Flaherty, K. T.; DiPaola, R. S.; Heitjan, D. F.; Lal, P.; Feldman, M. D.; Roysam, B.; Lee, W. M. F.
Article Title: An active learning approach for rapid characterization of endothelial cells in human tumors
Abstract: Currently, no available pathological or molecular measures of tumor angiogenesis predict response to antiangiogenic therapies used in clinical practice. Recognizing that tumor endothelial cells (EC) and EC activation and survival signaling are the direct targets of these therapies, we sought to develop an automated platform for quantifying activity of critical signaling pathways and other biological events in EC of patient tumors by histopathology. Computer image analysis of EC in highly heterogeneous human tumors by a statistical classifier trained using examples selected by human experts performed poorly due to subjectivity and selection bias. We hypothesized that the analysis can be optimized by a more active process to aid experts in identifying informative training examples. To test this hypothesis, we incorporated a novel active learning (AL) algorithm into FARSIGHT image analysis software that aids the expert by seeking out informative examples for the operator to label. The resulting FARSIGHT-AL system identified EC with specificity and sensitivity consistently greater than 0.9 and outperformed traditional supervised classification algorithms. The system modeled individual operator preferences and generated reproducible results. Using the results of EC classification, we also quantified proliferation (Ki67) and activity in important signal transduction pathways (MAP kinase, STAT3) in immunostained human clear cell renal cell carcinoma and other tumors. FARSIGHT-AL enables characterization of EC in conventionally preserved human tumors in a more automated process suitable for testing and validating in clinical trials. The results of our study support a unique opportunity for quantifying angiogenesis in a manner that can now be tested for its ability to identify novel predictive and response biomarkers. © 2014 Padmanabhan et al.
Keywords: immunohistochemistry; signal transduction; mitogen activated protein kinase; controlled study; human tissue; human cell; histopathology; sensitivity and specificity; ki 67 antigen; reproducibility; stat3 protein; image analysis; automation; kidney carcinoma; clear cell carcinoma; tumor vascularization; selection bias; computer analysis; learning algorithm; human; article; imaging software; tumor cells and cell lines; tumor endothelial cell
Journal Title: PLoS ONE
Volume: 9
Issue: 3
ISSN: 1932-6203
Publisher: Public Library of Science  
Date Published: 2014-03-01
Start Page: e90495
Language: English
DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0090495
PROVIDER: scopus
PMCID: PMC3946171
PUBMED: 24603893
DOI/URL:
Notes: Export Date: 1 May 2014 -- CODEN: POLNC -- Source: Scopus
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