Cancer Research & Technology

Compositional Imaging with Artificial Intelligence to Improve Breast Cancer Detection

We use a dual-energy X-ray imaging technique and a neural network to investigate novel compositional imaging biomarkers for health

Lambert T Leong, PhD
Towards Data Science
7 min readNov 14, 2021

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Compositional heat map for cancerous and non-cancerous breast lesion types. Redder colors indicate thicker regions while bluer regions represent thinner or no thickness.
Compositional Heatmaps of Cancerous and Non-Cancerous Breast Lesion Types. Image by Author

Summary

Current Breast Cancer Imaging Technologies

As of today, (2021) breast cancer is the leading cause of cancer mortality in women worldwide. There are several treatment options such as surgical removal, chemotherapy, and radiation however, it is only a part of the solution. Finding and identifying cancers early is just as important, if not more, than the treatments themselves.

Imaging has had a tremendous impact on reducing cancer mortality. Mammography, an X-ray based imaging technique, is the primary imaging technology for breast cancer and it allows clinicians to see the underlying tissues and structures. Within the last decade, digital breast tomosynthesis (DBT) has become the standard of care and this imaging technique results in a three dimensional (3D) X-ray image while standard mammography provides a 2D image.

Computer-Aided Detection or CAD software delineates breast masses, calcifications, and calcification clusters. The radiologist delineation of an invasive breast lesion is superimposed over CAD findings
Image by Author

Figure 1: Computer-aided Detection (CAD) finds masses (green), calcifications (red), and calcifications clusters (blue). The actual cancerous lesion found by the radiologist is in yellow.

Images acquired from standard mammography or DBT are reviewed by radiologists who look for suspicious lesions and calcifications. Calcifications in breast tissue are not uncommon and sometimes indicate cancer or a risk of developing cancer. Computer-aided detection or CAD software has been developed and approved by the food and drug administration (FDA) to help assist clinicians with the process of screening images for cancer. Recent advances in artificial intelligence (AI) has led to drastic improvements in CAD and even the development of AI based CAD software.

The Biopsy Problem

So with all these great advances in breast imaging technology the fight against cancer should be easier right? The simple answer is yes but there is a slight problem. While it is true that imaging has helped to identify more cancers and reduce mortality rates, there is still the issue of false positive biopsies. When a lesion is deemed suspicious on imaging, it is often biopsied. A biopsy is an invasive procedure in which a tissue sample of the suspicious lesion is taken from a woman’s breast to be viewed under a microscope. A false positive biopsy means that the pathologist did not find any signs of cancer in the tissue and the lesion seen on imaging is benign or non-cancerous. Essentially, false positives lead to unnecessary invasive biopsies and can be detrimental to a person’s physical and mental health. This problem exists in part because imaging has become more sensitive and many more lesions can be seen. However, specificity has not improved enough meaning it is still difficult to tell a cancerous lesion from a non-cancerous lesion.

What is Compositional Imaging

Three compartment breast (3CB) imaging is a dual-energy X-ray technique that produces images or maps of the different tissue types within an imaged breast. The 3CB technique was inspired by dual-energy X-ray absorptiometry (DXA) which is commonly used to evaluate bone density and body composition. With 3CB, two images are taken in quick succession. One image is at a low energy, equivalent to a standard mammogram, and the other image is taken at a higher energy. X-rays at different energies will have different behaviors when passing through different tissues and the contrasts between the high and low energy X-ray images are used to derive the specific tissue types. The 3CB imaging technique helps to visualize and quantify the amount of lipid, water, and protein in the breast.

Standard mammogram and its 3CB lipid, water, and protein maps resulting from dual-energy X-ray compositional imaging.
Image by Author

Figure 2: Standard mammogram next to its lipid, water, and protein maps derived from dual-energy three compartment breast (3CB) compositional imaging.

It should be noted that higher energy X-rays used in 3CB are safe and the level of radiation is nothing to be concerned with. In fact, 3CB imaging requires only 2 images while standard DBT images require about 7 to 9 images, depending on the system. Therefore, the level of additional radiation resulting from the 3CB technique is comparable, if not lower, than a DBT image sequence. To further insist on the safety of 3CB, contrast enhanced mammography (CEM) uses a nearly identical imaging protocol in which high and low energy images are acquired. CEM is also approved by the FDA and may be overall more risky than 3CB since the contrast agent used in CEM could provoke a bad reaction in anaphylaxis.

How Can Composition Help

It has been known that composition is important with respect to breast cancer. Breast density is a powerful risk factor and density often results from high fibroglandular tissue or protein. Others have studied breast cancer lesions at a cellular/molecular level and discovered that invasive lesion types tend to consume or metabolize lipids. It is hypothesized that the mechanism for this behavior was due to the aggressive growth nature of invasive breast lesions. Lipids or fats are an energy source and aggressive tumors will consume whatever they can to fuel their rapid growth. As a result, we found that we could pick up on a signal that characterized malignant lesion types. This signal consisted of cancerous lesions having lower fat or lipid content when compared to the surrounding regions.

lipid, water, and protein compositional signatures of malignant and benign breast lesion types. Orange and blue dashed lines show that malignant and benign lesions have significantly different compositions with respects to lipid, water, and protein.
Image by Author

Figure 3: The lipid, water, and protein signatures were captured at 2, 4, and 6 millimeters from the lesion. The space between the orange and blue dashed lines show a significant difference in composition for cancerous and non-cancerous lesion types.

The Role of Artificial Intelligence

To demonstrate the utility of our 3CB compositional imaging we used AI to see if the compositional difference between cancerous and non-cancerous lesions could be learned. We also wanted to see how the compositional information derived from the 3CB technique adds useful diagnostic information to existing clinical paradigms. We used CAD as our baseline and we wanted to see if AI with 3CB could outperform CAD.

Area under the curve with confidence intervals showing improved detection performance when 3CB composition is used with CAD.
Image by Author

Figure 4: Area under the receiver operating characteristic curves (AUC) for CAD and CAD+3CB performance with 95% confidence intervals (CI). The orange line indicates better detection performance for CAD with composition versus CAD alone, shown in blue.
*Code used to generate AUC with CI plot detailed HERE or HERE

As you can see from our area under the receiver operating characteristic curves (AUC) that the AI+3CB+CAD model outperformed CAD alone. This indicates that composition is important and offers additional information not captured solely by CAD. In other words, CAD and radiologists with standard mammography use shape, texture, and morphometry information for identifying cancer. 3CB offers that same information as well as composition which has proven to be beneficial. The integrated discrimination improvement (IDI) plot shows that the improved performance is manly due to a reduction in false positives. As discussed before, there is a biopsy problem and reducing false positives using 3CB composition could reduce unnecessary biopsies and ameliorate the problem.

IDI plot showing improvement in specificity with respect to BI-RADS diagnostic categories.
Image by Author

Figure 5: Integrated discrimination improvement (IDI) and net reclassification index (NRI) showing that 3CB improves specificity. Metrics are plotted next to Breast Imaging-Reporting and Data System (BI-RADS) cutoffs for clinical reference.
*Code used to generate IDI with NRI plots detailed HERE or HERE

What is Next for 3CB

We are continuing our work and research on 3CB by adapting the protocol to work with CEM machines 1R01CA257652–01A1. Using existing contrast enhanced mammography machines approved by the FDA for our 3CB imaging would help accelerate the adoption of the technology.

References

[1] Leong, L., Malkov, S., Drukker, K., Niell, B., Sadowski, P., Wolfgruber, T., … & Shepherd, J., Dual-energy three compartment breast imaging (3CB) for novel compositional biomarkers to improve detection of malignant lesions, (2021).

Originally published at https://www.lambertleong.com on November 14, 2021.

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