AI‐based intra‐tumor heterogeneity score of Ki67 expression as a prognostic marker for early‐stage ER+/HER2− breast cancer

Author:

Lu Wenqi1ORCID,Lashen Ayat G23,Wahab Noorul1ORCID,Miligy Islam M23,Jahanifar Mostafa1,Toss Michael2,Graham Simon1,Bilal Mohsin1,Bhalerao Abhir1,Atallah Nehal M2,Makhlouf Shorouk2,Ibrahim Asmaa Y2,Snead David4,Minhas Fayyaz1,Raza Shan E Ahmed1,Rakha Emad2,Rajpoot Nasir1

Affiliation:

1. Tissue Image Analytics (TIA) Centre, Department of Computer Science University of Warwick Coventry UK

2. Academic Unit for Translational Medical Sciences, School of Medicine University of Nottingham Nottingham UK

3. Department of Pathology, Faculty of Medicine Menoufia University Menoufia Egypt

4. Department of Pathology University Hospitals Coventry and Warwickshire NHS Trust Coventry UK

Abstract

AbstractEarly‐stage estrogen receptor positive and human epidermal growth factor receptor negative (ER+/HER2−) luminal breast cancer (BC) is quite heterogeneous and accounts for about 70% of all BCs. Ki67 is a proliferation marker that has a significant prognostic value in luminal BC despite the challenges in its assessment. There is increasing evidence that spatial colocalization, which measures the evenness of different types of cells, is clinically important in several types of cancer. However, reproducible quantification of intra‐tumor spatial heterogeneity remains largely unexplored. We propose an automated pipeline for prognostication of luminal BC based on the analysis of spatial distribution of Ki67 expression in tumor cells using a large well‐characterized cohort (n = 2,081). The proposed Ki67 colocalization (Ki67CL) score can stratify ER+/HER2− BC patients with high significance in terms of BC‐specific survival (p < 0.00001) and distant metastasis‐free survival (p = 0.0048). Ki67CL score is shown to be highly significant compared with the standard Ki67 index. In addition, we show that the proposed Ki67CL score can help identify luminal BC patients who can potentially benefit from adjuvant chemotherapy.

Funder

Innovate UK

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Pathology and Forensic Medicine

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