Deep learning tools for digital histology
Project description
Slideflow provides a unified API for building and testing deep learning models for digital pathology, supporting both Tensorflow and PyTorch.
Slideflow includes tools for whole-slide image processing and tile extraction, customizable deep learning model training with dozens of supported architectures, explainability tools including heatmaps, mosaic maps, GANs, and saliency maps, analysis of activations from model layers, uncertainty quantification, and more. A variety of fast, optimized whole-slide image processing tools are included, including background filtering, blur/artifact detection, stain normalization, and efficient storage in *.tfrecords
format. Model training is easy and highly configurable, with an easy drop-in API for training custom architectures. For external training loops, Slideflow can be used as an image processing backend, serving an optimized tf.data.Dataset
or torch.utils.data.DataLoader
to read and process slide images and perform real-time stain normalization.
Slideflow Workbench: a visualization tool for interacting with models and whole-slide images, new in version 1.3.
Slideflow has been used by:
- Dolezal et al, Modern Pathology, 2020
- Rosenberg et al, Journal of Clinical Oncology [abstract], 2020
- Howard et al, Nature Communications, 2021
- Dolezal et al [arXiv], 2022
- Storozuk et al, Modern Pathology [abstract], 2022
- Partin et al [arXiv], 2022
- Dolezal et al [abstract], 2022
- Howard et al [bioRxiv], 2022
Full documentation with example tutorials can be found at slideflow.dev.
Requirements
- Python >= 3.7
- Libvips >= 8.9.
- OpenSlide
- Tensorflow 2.5-2.9 or PyTorch 1.9-1.12
- QuPath [optional] - Used for pathologist ROIs
- Linear solver [optional] - Used for preserved-site cross-validation
- CPLEX 20.1.0 with Python API
- or Pyomo with Bonmin solver
Updates (1.3.0-rc0)
Please see the Version 1.3.0-rc0 Release Notes for a summary of the latest updates and fixes in the latest release candidate.
Installation
Slideflow can be installed either with PyPI or as a Docker container. To install via pip:
pip3 install --upgrade setuptools pip wheel
pip3 install slideflow
Alternatively, pre-configured docker images are available with OpenSlide/Libvips and the latest version of either Tensorflow and PyTorch. To install with the Tensorflow backend:
docker pull jamesdolezal/slideflow:latest-tf
docker run -it --gpus all jamesdolezal/slideflow:latest-tf
To install with the PyTorch backend:
docker pull jamesdolezal/slideflow:latest-torch
docker run -it --shm-size=2g --gpus all jamesdolezal/slideflow:latest-torch
Getting started
Slideflow experiments are organized into Projects, which supervise storage of whole-slide images, extracted tiles, and patient-level annotations. To create a new project, create an instance of the slideflow.Project
class, supplying a pre-configured set of patient-level annotations in CSV format:
import slideflow as sf
P = sf.Project(
'/project/path',
annotations="/patient/annotations.csv"
)
Once the project is created, add a new dataset source with paths to whole-slide images, tumor Region of Interest (ROI) files [if applicable], and paths to where extracted tiles/tfrecords should be stored. This will only need to be done once.
P.add_source(
name="TCGA",
slides="/slides/directory",
roi="/roi/directory",
tiles="/tiles/directory",
tfrecords="/tfrecords/directory"
)
This step should attempt to automatically associate slide names with the patient identifiers in your annotations file. After this step has completed, double check that the annotations file has a slide
column for each annotation entry with the filename (without extension) of the corresponding slide.
Extract tiles from slides
Next, whole-slide images are segmented into smaller image tiles and saved in *.tfrecords
format. Extract tiles from slides at a given magnification (width in microns size) and resolution (width in pixels) using sf.Project.extract_tiles()
:
P.extract_tiles(
tile_px=299, # Tile size, in pixels
tile_um=302 # Tile size, in microns
)
If slides are on a network drive or a spinning HDD, tile extraction can be accelerated by buffering slides to a SSD or ramdisk:
P.extract_tiles(
...,
buffer="/mnt/ramdisk"
)
Training models
Once tiles are extracted, models can be trained. Start by configuring a set of hyperparameters:
params = sf.ModelParams(
tile_px=299,
tile_um=302,
batch_size=32,
model='xception',
learning_rate=0.0001,
...
)
Models can then be trained using these parameters. Models can be trained to categorical, multi-categorical, continuous, or time-series outcomes, and the training process is highly configurable. For example, to train models in cross-validation to predict the outcome 'category1'
as stored in the project annotations file:
P.train(
'category1',
params=params,
save_predictions=True,
multi_gpu=True
)
Evaluation, heatmaps, mosaic maps, and more
Slideflow includes a host of additional tools, including model evaluation and prediction, heatmaps, mosaic maps, analysis of layer activations, and more. See our full documentation for more details and tutorials.
License
This code is made available under the GPLv3 License and is available for non-commercial academic purposes.
Reference
If you find our work useful for your research, or if you use parts of this code, please consider citing as follows:
James Dolezal, Sara Kochanny, & Frederick Howard. (2022). Slideflow: A Unified Deep Learning Pipeline for Digital Histology (1.1.0). Zenodo. https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.5703792
@software{james_dolezal_2022_5703792,
author = {James Dolezal and
Sara Kochanny and
Frederick Howard},
title = {{Slideflow: A Unified Deep Learning Pipeline for
Digital Histology}},
month = apr,
year = 2022,
publisher = {Zenodo},
version = {1.1.0},
doi = {10.5281/zenodo.5703792},
url = {https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.5703792}
}
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