Oops, you're using an old version of your browser so some of the features on this page may not be displaying properly.

MINIMAL Requirements: Google Chrome 24+Mozilla Firefox 20+Internet Explorer 11Opera 15–18Apple Safari 7SeaMonkey 2.15-2.23

Poster Display session 3

2594 - Algorithms derived from quantitative pathology can be a gatekeeper in patient selection for clinical trials in localised clear cell renal cell carcinoma (ccRCC)

Date

30 Sep 2019

Session

Poster Display session 3

Topics

Tumour Site

Renal Cell Cancer

Presenters

In Hwa Um

Citation

Annals of Oncology (2019) 30 (suppl_5): v356-v402. 10.1093/annonc/mdz249

Authors

I.H. Um1, L. Scott-Hayward2, M. MacKenzie2, P.H. Tan3, R. Kanesvaran4, Y. Choudhury5, M. Tan6, M. O'Donnell7, P.D. Caie1, G.D. Stewart8, D.J. Harrison9

Author affiliations

  • 1 School Of Medicine, University of St Andrews, KY16 9TF - St Andrews/GB
  • 2 School Of Mathematics And Statistics, University of St Andrews, KY16 9LZ - St Andrews/GB
  • 3 Pathology, Singapore general hospital, 169608 - Singapore/SG
  • 4 Oncology, NCCS - National Cancer Centre Singapore, 169610 - Singapore/SG
  • 5 Research And Development, Lucence Diagnostics, 159555 - Singapore/SG
  • 6 Ceo, Lucence Diagnostics, 159555 - Singapore/SG
  • 7 Pathology, Western general hospital, EH4 2XU - Edinburgh/GB
  • 8 Department Of Surgery, University of Cambridge, Cambridge/GB
  • 9 School Of Medicine, University of St Andrews, KY16 9TF - St Andrews, Scotland/GB

Resources

Login to access the resources on OncologyPRO.

If you do not have an ESMO account, please create one for free.

Abstract 2594

Background

Identifying low risk of disease recurrence in localised ccRCC is key for gatekeeping in the adjuvant therapy enrolment. Uncertainty increases the number of patients required for accrual to achieve statistical power. Current scoring systems are good at identifying very low and very high risk cohorts, but have not been proved to be as effective at accurately predicting disease recurrence in intermediate groups. These patients are perhaps those likely to benefit from intervention in addition to surgery, but many may be treated unnecessarily. Using digital pathology, image analysis and machine learning we sought to stratify for risk in this intermediate category.

Methods

Definiens Tissue studio and Developer XD were utilised for object thresholding to measure tumour cell nuclear morphological features on H&E digitised images from 120 ccRCC training set from UK and 217 ccRCC validation set from Singapore. Multiplexed immunofluorescence (mIF) was performed on 120 cases to co-detect neo-vasculature and pan-T cells. An algorithm was derived to measure spatial relationships between blood vessels and T cells. A statistical model was developed by generalised linear model with spatially adaptive local smoothing algorithm, having specificity prefixed (0.8-1) plus cross validation.

Results

Replacing manual nuclear grade with AI aided tumour cell nuclear morphological features improved the specificity of Leibovich score (LS) from 0.76 to 0.86 and from 0.84 to 0.94 in training and validation sets, respectively. Moreover, tumour microenvironment (TM) parameters significantly improved the specificity up to 0.93 in the training set. The negative predictive values of both LS 5 and 6 were zero, but by applying the algorithm the specificity for LS 5 and 6 cases became 0.93 and 0.40 respectively.

Conclusions

By applying image analysis it is possible to identify lower risk for recurrence patients in a conventionally identified intermediate risk group based on routine ccRCC H&E images, and multiplexed TM features. This approach to pathology should help refine selection of patients for clinical trials and form the basis of future AI-enabled prognostic and predictive algorithms in ccRCC.

Clinical trial identification

Editorial acknowledgement

Legal entity responsible for the study

Authors.

Funding

Renal Cancer Research Fund and NHS Lothian.

Disclosure

All authors have declared no conflicts of interest.

This site uses cookies. Some of these cookies are essential, while others help us improve your experience by providing insights into how the site is being used.

For more detailed information on the cookies we use, please check our Privacy Policy.

Customise settings
  • Necessary cookies enable core functionality. The website cannot function properly without these cookies, and you can only disable them by changing your browser preferences.