• DocumentCode
    1451793
  • Title

    Digital Pathology: Data-Intensive Frontier in Medical Imaging

  • Author

    Cooper, Lee A D ; Carter, Alexis B. ; Farris, Alton B. ; Wang, Fusheng ; Kong, Jun ; Gutman, David A. ; Widener, Patrick ; Pan, Tony C. ; Cholleti, Sharath R. ; Sharma, Ashish ; Kurc, Tahsin M. ; Brat, Daniel J. ; Saltz, Joel H.

  • Author_Institution
    Center for Comprehensive Inf., Emory Univ., Atlanta, GA, USA
  • Volume
    100
  • Issue
    4
  • fYear
    2012
  • fDate
    4/1/2012 12:00:00 AM
  • Firstpage
    991
  • Lastpage
    1003
  • Abstract
    Pathology is a medical subspecialty that practices the diagnosis of disease. Microscopic examination of tissue reveals information enabling the pathologist to render accurate diagnoses and to guide therapy. The basic process by which anatomic pathologists render diagnoses has remained relatively unchanged over the last century, yet advances in information technology now offer significant opportunities in image-based diagnostic and research applications. Pathology has lagged behind other healthcare practices such as radiology where digital adoption is widespread. As devices that generate whole slide images become more practical and affordable, practices will increasingly adopt this technology and eventually produce an explosion of data that will quickly eclipse the already vast quantities of radiology imaging data. These advances are accompanied by significant challenges for data management and storage, but they also introduce new opportunities to improve patient care by streamlining and standardizing diagnostic approaches and uncovering disease mechanisms. Computer-based image analysis is already available in commercial diagnostic systems, but further advances in image analysis algorithms are warranted in order to fully realize the benefits of digital pathology in medical discovery and patient care. In coming decades, pathology image analysis will extend beyond the streamlining of diagnostic workflows and minimizing interobserver variability and will begin to provide diagnostic assistance, identify therapeutic targets, and predict patient outcomes and therapeutic responses.
  • Keywords
    biological tissues; diseases; information technology; medical image processing; anatomic pathologists; computer-based image analysis; data management; data storage; data-intensive frontier; digital pathology; healthcare practices; image analysis algorithms; image-based diagnostic applications; information technology; interobserver variability; medical imaging; microscopic examination; patient care; research applications; tissue; Bioinformatics; Biomedical imaging; Diseases; Image analysis; Image segmentation; Medical image processing; Microscopy; Pathology; Virtual environments; Biomedical imaging; biomedical informatics; digital pathology; image analysis; virtual microscopy;
  • fLanguage
    English
  • Journal_Title
    Proceedings of the IEEE
  • Publisher
    ieee
  • ISSN
    0018-9219
  • Type

    jour

  • DOI
    10.1109/JPROC.2011.2182074
  • Filename
    6155059