Ovarian dysplasia: Nuclear texture analysis

Liane Deligdisch, Carlos Miranda, Joseph Barba, Joan Gil

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

51 Scopus citations

Abstract

Background. Ovarian dysplasia has been defined by histologic1,2 and morphometric studies3,4 focusing on architectural and nuclear profile changes. A new technique is used to enhance the accuracy of this diagnosis by a quantitative evaluation of the nuclear texture that represents the nuclear chromatin pattern on which conventional diagnoses of malignancy are usually made. Methods. Histologic sections from 35 ovaries classified as malignant (12), dysplastic (12), and normal (11) were evaluated by tracing boundaries of nuclear profiles and measuring “textons” (texture primitives) with a histogram analysis of three zones of gray level densities (called for simplification white, gray, and dark). The average combined area was tabulated for specimens with the same diagnosis, and linear regression plots compared the texton area with total nuclear area. Results. The dimensions of textons originally hidden inside the chromatin and revealed by histograms were found to be closely clustered in normal epithelium, and increasingly dissociated from the containing nucleus as the lesion progressed from dysplastic to malignant. The statistical multivariate analysis including nine parameters correctly classified the three diagnostic categories as normal, dysplastic, and malignant. Conclusions. Computerized image analysis of nuclear texture adds accuracy to the recently elaborated morphometric methods to define ovarian dysplasia, a potential precursor of ovarian carcinoma.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)3253-3257
Number of pages5
JournalCancer
Volume72
Issue number11
DOIs
StatePublished - 1 Dec 1993

Keywords

  • image analysis
  • morphometry
  • nuclear texture
  • ovarian dysplasia

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