Stain Color Adaptive Normalization (SCAN) algorithm: Separation and standardization of histological stains in digital pathology

•The histological stain variability can affect the pathologist's diagnosis.•The stain normalization is a powerful pre-processing tool for automated algorithms.•A novel multi-tissue method is proposed for stain separation and normalization.•The proposed algorithm showed high performance coupled...

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Bibliographic Details
Published inComputer methods and programs in biomedicine Vol. 193; p. 105506
Main Authors Salvi, Massimo, Michielli, Nicola, Molinari, Filippo
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published Ireland Elsevier B.V 01.09.2020
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Summary:•The histological stain variability can affect the pathologist's diagnosis.•The stain normalization is a powerful pre-processing tool for automated algorithms.•A novel multi-tissue method is proposed for stain separation and normalization.•The proposed algorithm showed high performance coupled with low computational times. The diagnosis of histopathological images is based on the visual analysis of tissue slices under a light microscope. However, the histological tissue appearance may assume different color intensities depending on the staining process, operator ability and scanner specifications. This stain variability affects the diagnosis of the pathologist and decreases the accuracy of computer-aided diagnosis systems. In this context, the stain normalization process has proved to be a powerful tool to cope with this issue, allowing to standardize the stain color appearance of a source image respect to a reference image. In this paper, novel fully automated stain separation and normalization approaches for hematoxylin and eosin stained histological slides are presented. The proposed algorithm, named SCAN (Stain Color Adaptive Normalization), is based on segmentation and clustering strategies for cellular structures detection. The SCAN algorithm is able to improve the contrast between histological tissue and background and preserve local structures without changing the color of the lumen and the background. Both stain separation and normalization techniques were qualitatively and quantitively validated on a multi-tissue and multiscale dataset, with highly satisfactory results, outperforming the state-of-the-art approaches. SCAN was also tested on whole-slide images with high performances and low computational times. The potential contribution of the proposed standardization approach is twofold: the improvement of visual diagnosis in digital histopathology and the development of powerful pre-processing strategies to automated classification techniques for cancer detection.
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ISSN:0169-2607
1872-7565
DOI:10.1016/j.cmpb.2020.105506