Abstract

Simple SummaryThe development of more translatable orthotopic mouse models is essential in order to study lung cancer more realistically. However, a major challenge in these orthotopic mouse models is the monitoring of tumor take, tumor growth and the detection of therapeutic effects. Therefore, the aim of this study was to train and validate a deep learning algorithm for fully automatic lung tumor quantification in whole-body mouse µCBCT scans. This deep learning application enables highly accurate longitudinal evaluation of tumor volume changes in mice with minimal operator involvement in the data analysis. In addition to longitudinal quantification of tumor development, the algorithm can also be deployed to optimize the randomization and 3R animal welfare aspects of the experimental design in preclinical studies.Lung cancer is the leading cause of cancer related deaths worldwide. The development of orthotopic mouse models of lung cancer, which recapitulates the disease more realistically compared to the widely used subcutaneous tumor models, is expected to critically aid the development of novel therapies to battle lung cancer or related comorbidities such as cachexia. However, follow-up of tumor take, tumor growth and detection of therapeutic effects is difficult, time consuming and requires a vast number of animals in orthotopic models. Here, we describe a solution for the fully automatic segmentation and quantification of orthotopic lung tumor volume and mass in whole-body mouse computed tomography (CT) scans. The goal is to drastically enhance the efficiency of the research process by replacing time-consuming manual procedures with fast, automated ones. A deep learning algorithm was trained on 60 unique manually delineated lung tumors and evaluated by four-fold cross validation. Quantitative performance metrics demonstrated high accuracy and robustness of the deep learning algorithm for automated tumor volume analyses (mean dice similarity coefficient of 0.80), and superior processing time (69 times faster) compared to manual segmentation. Moreover, manual delineations of the tumor volume by three independent annotators was sensitive to bias in human interpretation while the algorithm was less vulnerable to bias. In addition, we showed that besides longitudinal quantification of tumor development, the deep learning algorithm can also be used in parallel with the previously published method for muscle mass quantification and to optimize the experimental design reducing the number of animals needed in preclinical studies. In conclusion, we implemented a method for fast and highly accurate tumor quantification with minimal operator involvement in data analysis. This deep learning algorithm provides a helpful tool for the noninvasive detection and analysis of tumor take, tumor growth and therapeutic effects in mouse orthotopic lung cancer models.

Highlights

  • Lung cancer is the leading cause of cancer deaths worldwide, comprising approximately 25% of all cancer deaths [1]

  • One of the greatest challenges encountered by researchers in preclinical lung cancer research is the translatability of animal models [6,7]

  • One batch was retained as the test dataset to evaluate the model on unseen data, and the remaining three batches were used as training/test dataset

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Summary

Introduction

Lung cancer is the leading cause of cancer deaths worldwide, comprising approximately 25% of all cancer deaths [1]. In order to study lung cancer more realistically, models in which the tumor grows in its original stroma where it can interact with the complex microenvironment are needed [8]. Such orthotopic lung cancer models have been described in mice [9,10,11], but are not widely used in preclinical research due to a range of challenges involved. A proxy for tumor progression in orthotopic mouse models is mostly obtained from histological assessment in terminal experiments ending at sequential time points [12,13]. A more suitable option is the use of noninvasive imaging, such as computed tomography (CT), to monitor tumor progression over time

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