Development of patient-specific 3D models from histopathological samples for applications in radiation therapy

•Cell and nucleus size may impact the biological effects of radiation therapy.•Automated methods extract cell and nucleus size from histopathological samples.•3D tissue models are developed using patient specific information.•Tissue models containing cells and nuclei have applications in microdosime...

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Veröffentlicht in:Physica medica 2021-01, Vol.81, p.162-169
Hauptverfasser: DeCunha, Joseph M., Poole, Christopher M., Vallières, Martin, Torres, Jose, Camilleri-Broët, Sophie, Rayes, Roni F., Spicer, Jonathan D., Enger, Shirin A.
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:•Cell and nucleus size may impact the biological effects of radiation therapy.•Automated methods extract cell and nucleus size from histopathological samples.•3D tissue models are developed using patient specific information.•Tissue models containing cells and nuclei have applications in microdosimetry. The biological effects of ionizing radiation depend on the tissue, tumor type, radiation quality, and patient-specific factors. Inter-patient variation in cell/nucleus size may influence patient-specific dose response. However, this variability in dose response is not well investigated due to lack of available cell/nucleus size data. The aim of this study was to develop methods to derive cell/nucleus size distributions from digital images of 2D histopathological samples and use them to build digital 3D models for use in cellular dosimetry. Nineteen of sixty hematoxylin and eosin stained lung adenocarcinoma samples investigated passed exclusion criterion to be analyzed in the study. A difference of gaussians blob detection algorithm was used to identify nucleus centers and quantify cell spacing. Hematoxylin content was measured to determine nucleus radius. Pouring simulations were conducted to generate one-hundred 3D models containing volumes of equivalent cell spacing and nuclei radius to those in histopathological samples. The nuclei radius distributions of non-tumoral and cancerous regions appearing in the same slide were significantly different (p 
ISSN:1120-1797
1724-191X
DOI:10.1016/j.ejmp.2020.12.009