Artificial Intelligence for Prostate Cancer Diagnosis and Prognostication
Title: Artificial Intelligence for Prostate Cancer Diagnosis and Prognostication
DNr: Berzelius-2023-309
Project Type: LiU Berzelius
Principal Investigator: Martin Eklund <martin.eklund@ki.se>
Affiliation: Karolinska Institutet
Duration: 2023-12-01 – 2024-06-01
Classification: 30203
Homepage: https://staff.ki.se/people/martin-eklund
Keywords:

Abstract

Digital pathology enables using AI for improved cancer diagnostics and ultimately better treatment decisions. We intend to develop clinical-grade diagnostic and prognostic AI systems for prostate cancer pathology by integrating: 1) Large-scale datasets of digitized prostate biopsies from an international network of health care providers, 2) Cohorts with follow-up for clinical outcomes, 3) Genomic profiling of the samples, 4) Methods for calibration of scanner instruments, 5) Methods for estimating the reliability of predictions and 6) Methodology for deploying the algorithm on low-cost, portable scanners to also cover resource-constrained clinical settings. This will allow improving the quality and efficiency of pathology reporting and ultimately extending prognostication beyond human capacity by directly predicting disease progress from images and by integrating molecular data with tissue morphology. Utilizing diverse international data and calibration methods will allow training robust models and evaluating them in view of real-world sources of variation. Moreover, estimating the reliability of predictions is key for handling outliers and artefacts which are unavoidable in real-world use of diagnostic AI, and for providing useful feedback to the medical experts using the software in the clinic. Once the system design and training is complete, we plan on validating the resulting AI solution in a real-world environment by conducting clinical trials in 2024. This will initially focus on diagnosis and grading of prostate cancer (2024), and direct prognostication of outcome in the second phase (2025-2026). We have started preparatory work for doing this at Karolinska University Hospital and Stavanger University Hospital.