Abstract

Breast cancer is the most common type of cancer among women worldwide. The standard histopathology of breast tissue, the primary means of disease diagnosis, involves manual microscopic examination of stained tissue by a pathologist. Because this method relies on qualitative information, it can result in inter-observer variation. Furthermore, for difficult cases the pathologist often needs additional markers of malignancy to help in making a diagnosis, a need that can potentially be met by novel microscopy methods. We present a quantitative method for label-free breast tissue evaluation using Spatial Light Interference Microscopy (SLIM). By extracting tissue markers of malignancy based on the nanostructure revealed by the optical path-length, our method provides an objective, label-free and potentially automatable method for breast histopathology. We demonstrated our method by imaging a tissue microarray consisting of 68 different subjects −34 with malignant and 34 with benign tissues. Three-fold cross validation results showed a sensitivity of 94% and specificity of 85% for detecting cancer. Our disease signatures represent intrinsic physical attributes of the sample, independent of staining quality, facilitating classification through machine learning packages since our images do not vary from scan to scan or instrument to instrument.

Highlights

  • At the spatial scale of investigation we have used here, the perimeter of the malignant gland is less rapidly varying, on average, than that of a benign gland. This geometric feature is similar to the previous measurement of the gland perimeter fractal dimension that has been used for histopathology[23,29]

  • We presented a new method for quantitative evaluation of tissue biopsies obtained from patients under investigation for breast cancer

  • In the past much of quantitative histopathology has relied on analysis of stained tissue

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Summary

Introduction

We present a quantitative method for label-free breast tissue evaluation using Spatial Light Interference Microscopy (SLIM). We present a method for extracting quantitative markers of malignancy in breast tissue biopsies using Spatial Light Interference Microscopy (SLIM)[7]. SLIM is a quantitative phase imaging (QPI)[8] modality that generates contrast by measuring the variation of optical path-length difference (OPD) across the tissue specimen.

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