owkin / HistoSSLscaling

Code associated to the publication: Scaling self-supervised learning for histopathology with masked image modeling, A. Filiot et al., MedRxiv (2023). We publicly release Phikon πŸš€
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computational-pathology

Scaling Self-Supervised Learning for Histopathology with Masked Image Modeling

Scaling Self-Supervised Learning for Histopathology with Masked Image Modeling, MedRxiv, July 2023. [[`MedRxiv`]](https://www.medrxiv.org/content/10.1101/2023.07.21.23292757v2) [[`Project page`]](https://www.owkin.com/publications/scaling-self-supervised-learning-for-histopathology-with-masked-image-modeling) [[`Paper`]](https://www.medrxiv.org/content/10.1101/2023.07.21.23292757v2.full.pdf) > Filiot, A., Ghermi, R., Olivier, A., Jacob, P., Fidon, L., Kain, A. M., Saillard, C., & Schiratti, J.-B. (2023). Scaling Self-Supervised Learning for Histopathology with Masked Image Modeling. MedRxiv. ```bash @article{Filiot2023scalingwithMIM, author = {Alexandre Filiot and Ridouane Ghermi and Antoine Olivier and Paul Jacob and Lucas Fidon and Alice Mac Kain and Charlie Saillard and Jean-Baptiste Schiratti}, title = {Scaling Self-Supervised Learning for Histopathology with Masked Image Modeling}, elocation-id = {2023.07.21.23292757}, year = {2023}, doi = {10.1101/2023.07.21.23292757}, publisher = {Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory Press}, url = {https://www.medrxiv.org/content/early/2023/07/26/2023.07.21.23292757v2}, eprint = {https://www.medrxiv.org/content/early/2023/07/26/2023.07.21.23292757v2.full.pdf}, journal = {medRxiv} } ```

Update :tada: Phikon release on Hugging Face :tada:

We released our Phikon model on Hugging Face. Check out our community blog post ! We also provide a Colab notebook to perform weakly-supervised learning on Camelyon16 and fine-tuning with LoRA on NCT-CRC-HE using Phikon.

Here is a code snippet to perform feature extraction using Phikon.

from PIL import Image
import torch
from transformers import AutoImageProcessor, ViTModel

# load an image
image = Image.open("assets/example.tif")

# load phikon
image_processor = AutoImageProcessor.from_pretrained("owkin/phikon")
model = ViTModel.from_pretrained("owkin/phikon", add_pooling_layer=False)

# process the image
inputs = image_processor(image, return_tensors="pt")

# get the features
with torch.no_grad():
    outputs = model(**inputs)
    features = outputs.last_hidden_state[:, 0, :]  # (1, 768) shape

Official PyTorch Implementation and pre-trained models for Scaling Self-Supervised Learning for Histopathology with Masked Image Modeling. This minimalist repository aims to:

⚠️ Addendum :warning:

From 09.01.2023 to 10.30.2023, this repository stated using the student, please use the teacher backbone instead.

# feature extraction snippet with `rl_benchmarks` repository
from PIL import Image
from rl_benchmarks.models import iBOTViT

# instantiate iBOT ViT-B Pancancer model, aka Phikon
# /!\ please use the "teacher" encoder which produces better results !
weights_path = "/<your_root_dir>/weights/ibot_vit_base_pancan.pth">
ibot_base_pancancer = iBOTViT(architecture="vit_base_pancan", encoder="teacher", weights_path=weights_path)

# load an image and transform it into a normalized tensor
image = Image.open("assets/example.tif")  # (224, 224, 3), uint8
tensor = ibot_base_pancancer.transform(image) # (3, 224, 224), torch.float32
batch = tensor.unsqueeze(0)  # (1, 3, 224, 224), torch.float32

# compute the 768-d features
features = ibot_base_pancancer(batch).detach().cpu().numpy()
assert features.shape == (1, 768)

Abstract

Read full abstract from MedRxiv. ![main_figure](assets/main_figure.png) Computational pathology is revolutionizing the field of pathology by integrating advanced computer vision and machine learning technologies into diagnostic workflows. Recently, Self-Supervised Learning (SSL) has emerged as a promising solution to learn representations from histology patches, leveraging large volumes of unannotated whole slide images whole slide images (WSI). In particular, Masked Image Modeling (MIM) showed remarkable results and robustness over purely contrastive learning methods. In this work, we explore the application of MIM to histology using iBOT, a self-supervised transformer-based framework. Through a wide range of downstream tasks over seven cancer indications, we provide recommendations on the pre-training of large models for histology data using MIM. First, we demonstrate that in-domain pre-training with iBOT outperforms both ImageNet pre-training and a model pre-trained with a purely contrastive learning objective, MoCo V2. Second, we show that Vision Transformers (ViT), when scaled appropriately, have the capability to learn pan-cancer representations that benefit a large variety of downstream tasks. Finally, our iBOT ViT-Base model, pre-trained on more than 40 million histology images from 16 different cancer types, achieves state-of-the-art performance in most weakly-supervised WSI classification tasks compared to other SSL frameworks. Our code, models and features are publicly available at https://github.com/owkin/HistoSSLscaling.

Data structure

Download

You can download the data necessary to use the present code and reproduce our results here:

Please create weights, raw and preprocessed folders containing the content of the different downloads. This step may take time depending on your wifi bandwidth (folder takes 1.2 To). You can use rclone to download the folder from a remote machine (preferred in a tmux session).

Description

The bucket contains three main folders: a weights, raw and preprocessed folders. The weights folder contains weights for iBOT[ViT-B]PanCancer (our best ViT-B iBOT model). Other models from the literature can be retrieved from the corresponding Github repositories:

weights/
└── ibot_vit_base_pancan.pth          # Ours

The raw folder contains two subfolders for slide-level and tile-level downstream task.

[!WARNING] We don't provide raw slides or patches (slides, patches folders are empty). You can download raw slides or patches here:

Once you downloaded the data, please follow the same folders architecture as indicated below (without applying modifications on folders and files names compared to original download).

raw/
β”œβ”€β”€ slides_classification               # slides classification tasks
===============================================================================
β”‚Β Β  β”œβ”€β”€ CAMELYON16_FULL                 # cohort
β”‚Β Β  β”‚Β Β  β”œβ”€β”€ clinical                    # clinical data (for labels)
β”‚Β Β  β”‚Β Β  β”‚Β Β  β”œβ”€β”€ test_clinical_data.csv
β”‚Β Β  β”‚   β”‚Β Β  └── train_clinical_data.csv
β”‚Β Β  β”‚Β Β  └── slides                      # raw slides (not provided)
β”‚Β Β  β”‚Β    Β    β”œβ”€β”€ Normal_001.tif
β”‚Β Β  β”‚Β    Β Β   β”œβ”€β”€ Normal_002.tif...
β”‚Β Β  └── TCGA
β”‚Β Β      β”œβ”€β”€ tcga_statistics.pk          # For each cohort and label, list (n_patients, n_slides, labels_distribution)
β”‚Β Β   Β   β”œβ”€β”€ clinical                    # for TCGA, clinical data is divided into subfolders
β”‚Β Β   Β   β”‚Β Β  β”œβ”€β”€ hrd
β”‚Β Β   Β   β”‚Β Β  β”‚Β Β Β β”œβ”€β”€ hrd_labels_tcga_brca.csv
β”‚Β Β   Β   β”‚   β”‚Β   └── hrd_labels_tcga_ov.csv
β”‚Β Β   Β   β”‚Β Β  β”œβ”€β”€ msi
β”‚Β Β   Β   β”‚Β Β  β”‚Β Β  β”œβ”€β”€ msi_labels_tcga_coad.csv
β”‚Β Β   Β   β”‚Β Β  β”‚Β Β  β”œβ”€β”€ msi_labels_tcga_read.csv...
β”‚Β Β   Β   β”‚Β Β  β”œβ”€β”€ subtypes
β”‚Β Β   Β   β”‚Β Β  β”‚Β Β  β”œβ”€β”€ brca_tcga_pan_can_atlas_2018_clinical_data.tsv.gz
β”‚Β Β   Β   β”‚Β Β  β”‚Β Β  β”œβ”€β”€ coad_tcga_pan_can_atlas_2018_clinical_data.tsv.gz...
β”‚       β”‚Β Β  └── survival
β”‚Β Β   Β   β”‚Β Β  Β Β   β”œβ”€β”€ survival_labels_tcga_brca.csv
β”‚Β Β   Β   β”‚Β Β  Β Β   β”œβ”€β”€ survival_labels_tcga_coad.csv...
β”‚       └── slides
β”‚Β Β   Β       └── parafine
β”‚Β Β       Β Β   Β   β”œβ”€β”€ TCGA_BRCA
β”‚Β Β       Β Β      β”‚Β   β”œβ”€β”€ 03627311-e413-4218-b836-177abdfc3911
β”‚Β Β       Β Β      β”‚   β”‚Β Β  └── TCGA-XF-AAN7-01Z-00-DX1.B8EDF045-604C-48CB-8E54-A60564CAE2AD.svs
...

└── tiles_classification                # tiles classification tasks
===============================================================================
 Β Β  β”œβ”€β”€ CAMELYON17-WILDS_FULL           # cohort
 Β Β  β”‚Β Β  β”œβ”€β”€ clinical                    # clinical data (for labels)
    β”‚Β Β  β”‚ Β Β  └── metadata.csv
 Β Β  β”‚Β Β  └── patches                     # patches (not provided)
 Β Β  β”‚     Β Β  β”œβ”€β”€ patient_004_node_4...
    β”‚        β”‚Β Β  β”œβ”€β”€ patch_patient_004_node_4_x_10016_y_16704.png...
    └── NCT-CRC_FULL
        β”œβ”€β”€ labels                      # here the labels are set using the folders architecture
        β”‚Β Β  └── dict_labels.pkl
        └── patches
            β”œβ”€β”€ NCT-CRC-VAL-HE-7K
            β”‚    β”œβ”€β”€ ADI...
            β”‚    β”‚    β”œβ”€β”€ ADI-TCGA-AAICEQFN.tif...
            └── NCT-CRC-HE-100K-NONORM
                 β”œβ”€β”€ ADI...
                 β”‚    β”œβ”€β”€ ADI-AAAFLCLY.tif...

The preprocessed folder contains two subfolders for slide-level and tile-level downstream tasks.

[!NOTE] We provide all matter tiles for each slide. All tiles were extracted at 0.5 micrometers / pixel (20x magnification) except for CTransPath (mpp = 1.0 following the authors recommendation).

[!WARNING] The tile_level is computed with openslide.deepzoom.DeepZoomGenerator through the following schematic syntax:

from openslide import open_slide
from openslide.deepzoom import DeepZoomGenerator

slide = open_slide("<slide_path>")
dzg = DeepZoomGenerator(slide, tile_size=224, overlap=0)
tile = dzg.get_tile(level=17, address=(8, 10))
# this corresponds to coordinates (17, 8, 10) in the coordinates we provide for the given slide
  • Tile-level: for each feature extractor and dataset, we provide patches ids and features. Features are (N_patches_dataset, d) numpy arrays and ids take the form of (N_patches_dataset, 1) string numpy array.

Here is a description of the different features and coordinates we provide in the preprocessed folder.

preprocessed/                         # preprocessed data (coords, features)
===============================================================================
β”œβ”€β”€ slides_classification             # slides classification tasks
β”‚Β Β  β”œβ”€β”€ coords
β”‚Β Β  β”‚Β Β  β”œβ”€β”€ coords_224                # coordinates for 224 x 224 tiles
β”‚Β Β  β”‚Β Β  β”‚Β Β  β”œβ”€β”€ CAMELYON16_FULL       # cohort 
β”‚Β Β  β”‚Β Β  β”‚Β Β  β”‚Β Β  β”œβ”€β”€ Normal_001.tif    # slide_id
β”‚Β Β  β”‚Β Β  β”‚Β Β  β”‚Β Β   Β Β  └── coords.npy    # coordinates array (N_tiles_slide, 3)
...
β”‚Β Β  β”‚Β Β  β”‚Β Β  β”œβ”€β”€ TCGA
β”‚Β Β  β”‚Β Β  β”‚Β Β  β”‚   β”œβ”€β”€ TCGA_BRCA
β”‚Β Β  β”‚Β Β  β”‚Β Β  β”‚   β”‚Β Β  β”œβ”€β”€ TCGA-3C-AALI-01Z-00-DX1.F6E9A5DF-D8FB-45CF-B4BD-C6B76294C291.svs
β”‚Β Β  β”‚   β”‚Β Β  β”‚Β Β  β”‚Β Β   Β Β  └── coords.npy
...
β”‚Β Β  β”‚Β Β  β”œβ”€β”€ coords_256                # coordinates for 256 x 256 tiles
β”‚Β Β  β”‚Β Β  └── coords_4096               # coordinates for 4096 x 4096 tiles

...
β”‚Β Β  └── features                      # features
β”‚Β Β   Β Β  β”œβ”€β”€ iBOTViTBasePANCAN         # feature extractor
β”‚Β Β      β”‚Β Β  β”œβ”€β”€ CAMELYON16_FULL       # cohort
β”‚Β Β      β”‚Β Β  β”‚Β Β  β”œβ”€β”€ Normal_001.tif    # slide_id
β”‚Β Β      β”‚Β Β  β”‚Β Β   Β Β  └── features.npy  # features array (N_tiles_slide, 3+d)
...
β”‚Β Β   Β Β  β”‚Β Β  β”œβ”€β”€ TCGA
β”‚Β Β   Β Β  β”‚Β Β  β”‚   β”œβ”€β”€ TCGA_BRCA
β”‚Β Β   Β Β  β”‚Β Β  β”‚   β”‚Β Β  β”œβ”€β”€ TCGA-3C-AALI-01Z-00-DX1.F6E9A5DF-D8FB-45CF-B4BD-C6B76294C291.svs
β”‚Β Β      β”‚Β Β  β”‚Β Β  β”‚Β Β   Β Β  └── features.npy
...
β”‚Β Β   Β Β  β”œβ”€β”€ MoCoWideResNetCOAD        # same structure applies for all extractors
β”‚Β Β   Β Β  β”œβ”€β”€ ResNet50
β”‚Β Β   Β Β  β”œβ”€β”€ iBOTViTBaseCOAD
β”‚Β Β   Β Β  β”œβ”€β”€ iBOTViTBasePANCAN
β”‚Β Β   Β Β  β”œβ”€β”€ iBOTViTLargeCOAD
β”‚Β Β   Β Β  β”œβ”€β”€ iBOTViTSmallCOAD
...
/!\ If you wish to extract features for Dino[ViT-S]BRCA, Dino[ViT-S]PanCancer, HIPT and CTransPath, those features should be placed here.

β”‚Β Β   Β Β  β”œβ”€β”€ DinoChenBRCA              
β”‚Β Β   Β Β  β”œβ”€β”€ DinoChenPancancer
β”‚Β Β   Β Β  β”œβ”€β”€ HIPT
β”‚       └── CTransPath
===============================================================================
└── tiles_classification              # tiles classification tasks
 Β Β  └── features                      # features
Β  Β      β”œβ”€β”€ iBOTViTBasePANCAN         # feature extractor
Β Β       β”‚Β Β  β”œβ”€β”€ CAMELYON17-WILDS_FULL # cohort
Β Β       β”‚   β”‚Β Β  β”œβ”€β”€ tile_features.npy # tiles features array (N_tiles_cohort, d)
 Β Β      β”‚   β”‚Β Β  └── tile_ids.npy      # tiles ids array (N_tiles_cohort,)
Β  Β      β”‚Β Β  └── NCT-CRC_FULL
Β Β       β”‚    Β Β  β”œβ”€β”€ tile_features.npy
 Β Β      β”‚    Β Β  └── tile_ids.npy
Β  Β   Β Β  β”œβ”€β”€ MoCoWideResNetCOAD
Β Β    Β Β  β”œβ”€β”€ ResNet50
Β  Β   Β Β  β”œβ”€β”€ iBOTViTBaseCOAD
Β Β    Β Β  β”œβ”€β”€ iBOTViTBasePANCAN
Β  Β   Β Β  β”œβ”€β”€ iBOTViTLargeCOAD
Β Β    Β Β  └── iBOTViTSmallCOAD

rl_benchmarks repository

You can find a detailed description of the repository in rl_benchmarks/README.md file.

  1. Hardware
  2. Installation
  3. Feature extraction
  4. Slide-level downstream tasks
  5. Tile-level downstream tasks
  6. Notes

Hardware

As a pre-requirement, we suggest to work on a machine with at least 8 CPUs, 32 Gb RAM and 1 GPU with at least 15Gb RAM. For instance, our experiments run on a Tesla T4 (15 Gb RAM), 32 Intel(R) Xeon(R) CPUs (@ 2.00GHz) and 64 Gb RAM.

Installation

Installing OpenSlide

rl_benchmarks relies on the OpenSlide library to read WSI. The python bindings are automatically installed with rl_benchmarks library, but you will also need the C library:

Installing the correct pixman version

Pixman is a dependency of libopenslide (the C library installed through apt). Note that versions 0.3* and 0.4* gives different results one versus the other. Experiments were conducted with version 0.36.0. You can change the system wide version of Pixman using apt. The following command should show the version installed:

apt list --installed | grep pixman

If the returned version is not 0.36.0 you can try to install it with your package manager:

sudo apt update
sudo apt install libpixman-1-0

All the accessible versions are stored in this website. You can eventually run apt-get check to check for broken dependencies.

Installing rl_benchmarks package within this repo

Create a dedicated conda environment (optional):

conda create -n rl_benchmarks python=3.8
conda activate rl_benchmarks

Install rl_benchmarks package and its dependencies using the install.sh file.

git clone https://github.com/owkin/HistoSSLscaling.git
cd ./HistoSSLscaling
# Install the RL_benchmarks repository (in editable mode) together with other requirements
python -m pip install -e .  -r requirements.txt 

Once the installation and data download steps are completed, you finally need to edit the conf.yaml file so that to specify:

Run tests (10 minutes)

Once data has been downloaded and the previous installation steps done, you can run the full test suite to make sure features are loaded correctly. You first need to add specific requirements via:

python -m pip install -r requirements-tests.txt

Then, you can run the whole stack of tests by running the following command (within a tmux session is strongly recommended):

bash dev_tools/run_tests.sh

You can also perform linting checks via:

bash dev_tools/linting.sh

[NOTE!] If you also wish to only test that your raw data (WSIs datasets and tiles datasets) follow the good structure, please run

pytest -v tests/ -m test_raw_data_loading

Feature extraction

This repository enables you to extract and store the features associated with our iBOT[ViT-B]PanCancer. Beforehand, you will need to download raw slides and strictly stick to the architecture described in the Data structure section (raw folder).

[!NOTE] If you are only interested in reproducing the results by running cross-validations, you can directly download and use coordinates and features (provided as numpy arra`ys) for all representation learning models and cohorts used in our publication.

Slide features extraction

To extract features for each slide of a slide-level dataset, use the following tool: ./tools/extract_features/extract_slide_features.py.

python ./tools/extract_features/extract_slide_features.py \
  feature_extractor=$feature_extractor \
  slide_dataset=$dataset \
  n_tiles=$n_tiles \
  batch_size=$batch_size \
  random_sampling=$random_sampling \
  seed=$seed \
  num_workers=$num_workers \
  device=$device \
  features_output_dir=$output_dir

Example:

python ./tools/extract_featuresextract_slide_features.py \
  feature_extractor="iBOTViTBasePANCAN" \
  slide_dataset="tcga_coad" \
  n_tiles=1_000 \
  batch_size=64 \
  random_sampling=True \
  seed=0 \
  num_workers=8 \
  device="[0,1]" \
  features_output_dir=null 

The following command extracts features from TCGA-COAD cohort using our ViT-based iBOT model iBOT[ViT-B]PanCancer. 1,000 slides per slide are extracted in a random order (with seed set to 0). Process uses 2 GPUs (id 0 and 1) and 8 workers. features_output_dir=null will assign None value to features_output_dir. In that case, the path to the features output directory will automatically be picked up in conf.yaml file.

[!NOTE] Slide features are saved as follows: {features_path}/{feature_extractor}/{slide_dataset}/{slide_id}.{slide_format}/features.npy

For each slide, a (N_tiles, 3+d) numpy arrays is saved, with d being the model's last layer. The 3 first columns rows correspond to (tile_level, x_coordinate, y_coordinate) where tile_level is computed with openslide.deepzoom.DeepZoomGenerator (see "Data structure" section).

For example:

/workspace/data/preprocessed/slides_classification/features/ResNet50/TCGA/TCGA_COAD/TCGA-AA-3864-01Z-00-DX1.f6992bc7-ba05-4c30-9500-8f7b07b30f9a.svs/features.npy

To import them, you can use np.load:

import numpy as np

features = np.load(”features.npy”)
assert features.shape == (n_tiles, feature_dim+3)

[!WARNING] Once you have downloaded the data, tile levels and coordinates are automatically retrieved for each cohort and feature extractor. Our repository allows to generate the features used in our experiments. If you wish to change the tiles coordinates and level, you can create new coords.npy files and change the path to coordinates folder in the constants.py file.

Tile features extraction

To extract features for tile-level datasets (i.e. NCT-CRC and Camelyon17-WILDS), use the following tool: ./tools/extract_features/extract_tile_features.py.

python ./tools/extract_features/extract_tile_features.py \
    tile_dataset=$dataset \
    feature_extractor=$feature_extractor \
    batch_size=$batch_size \
    seed=$seed \
    num_workers=$num_workers \
    device=$device \
    output_dir=$output_dir

Example:

The following command extracts features from TCGA-COAD cohort using our ViT-based iBOT model iBOT[ViT-B]PanCancer. 1,000 slides per slide are extracted in a random order (with seed set to 0). Process uses 2 GPUs (id 0 and 1) and 8 workers. features_output_dir=null will assign None value to features_output_dir. In that case, the path to the features output directory will automatically be picked up in conf.yaml file.

python ./tools/extract_features/extract_tile_features.py \
    tile_dataset="nct_crc" \
    feature_extractor="iBOTViTBasePANCAN" \
    batch_size=64 \
    seed=0 \
    num_workers=8 \
    device="[0,1]" \
    output_dir=null

[!NOTE] Tile features are saved as two numpy arrays, one containing the tile features (tile_features.npy) and the other containing the corresponding tile ids (tile_ids.npy) in {features_path}/{feature_extractor}/{tile_dataset}/ folder.

For example:

/workspace/data/preprocessed/tiles_classification/features/ResNet50/NCT-CRC_FULL/tile_features.npy and /workspace/data/preprocessed/tiles_classification/features/ResNet50/NCT-CRC_FULL/tile_ids.npy

import numpy as np

features = np.load("tile_features.npy")
ids = np.load("tile_ids.npy")
assert features.shape == (n_samples, feature_dim)
assert ids.shape == (n_samples,)

Bash script

[!WARNING] If you wish to run all feature extractions sequentially, you can directly run

bash scripts/extract_slide_features.sh
bash scripts/extract_tile_features.sh

In those files, datasets and feature extractor are referenced as follows:

datasets="camelyon16_full tcga_coad tcga_kich tcga_kirc tcga_kirp tcga_luad tcga_lusc tcga_ov tcga_paad tcga_read tcga_stad "
feature_extractors="iBOTViTBasePANCAN"

Other feature extractors

If you wish to extract features (both at the slide and tile-level) for CTransPath [1], HIPT [2], DinoChenBRCA [3] and DinoChenPancancer [2], please directly use the corresponding repositories. Those models correspond to CTransPath, HIPT, Dino[ViT-S]BRCA and HIPT[ViT_256]:

After preprocessing of WSIs, we suggest using the above SSL models on tiles with same coordinates as provided in coords_256 (Dino[ViT-S]BRCA, HIPT[ViT_256]), coords_4096 (HIPT) and coords_224 (CTransPath). Generated features should follow, for each dataset, the same structure as described in the previous sections (1 features matrix for slides with (deepzoom_level, x, y) coordinates as first 3 columns, 1 features matrix for tiles-datasets).

Running experiments

This section describes how to run cross-validation experiments.

Slide-level downstream tasks

The scripts/slides_classification.sh script allows you to run 5x5 nested cross-validations on slide classification tasks (TCGA cohorts and Camelyon16 dataset). No parameter tweaking should be performed. scripts/slides_classification.sh iterates on:


During nested-cross validations, gridsearching is performed on 2 hyperparameters: learning rate (${10^{-3}, 10^{-4}}$) and weight decay (${0, 10^{-4}}$) as defined by the following instructions:

learning_rate_gs="[1.0e-3,1.0e-4]"
weight_decay_gs="[0.,1.0e-4]"

Also, stratification is performed at the patient level:

stratified=True
split_mode="patient_split"

The script tools/slide_level_tasks/get_results.py allows you to retrieve slide-classification results from each experiments. Output results take the form of a pd.DataFrame with all experiments' parameters and corresponding results. To get the results of nested cross-validations, simply do:

python tools/slide_level_tasks/get_results.py

[!WARNING] hipt_mil algorithm needs to set 1 slide's feature matrix per batch (batch size = 1). You can find the original implementation by HIPT authors here.

Tile-level downstream tasks

The scripts/tiles_classification.sh script allows you to run cross-validations and test evaluation on tile classification tasks on NCT-CRC and Camelyon17-WILDS datasets using a standard SGD classifier on top of frozen features. This script makes use of tools/tile_level_tasks/linear_evaluation.py which performs linear evaluation and stores metrics accordingly.

scripts/slides_classification.sh iterates on:

[!NOTE] Once corresponding features have been extracted and stored appropriately according to our data structure (see first section), you can run the above experiments on CTransPath, HIPT, DinoChenBRCA and DinoChenPancancer by simply adding in the feature_extractors parameter (bash scripts): CTransPath HIPT DinoChenBRCA DinoChenPancancer. Note that should not use HIPT for tiles classification but rather the first ViT-S/256 extractors (which is denoted by DinoChenPancancer).

Notes

When loading iBOTViTBasePANCAN, you may encounter the following message:

Pretrained weights found at <your_data_dir>/weights/ibot_vit_base_pancan.pth and loaded with msg: _IncompatibleKeys(missing_keys=[], unexpected_keys=['head.mlp.0.weight', 'head.mlp.0.bias', 'head.mlp.2.weight', 'head.mlp.2.bias', 'head.mlp.4.weight', 'head.mlp.4.bias', 'head.last_layer.weight_g', 'head.last_layer.weight_v', 'head.last_layer2.weight_g', 'head.last_layer2.weight_v'])

If so, this message is normal as our weights also contain the final MLP head, which are is needed for features extraction.

Todo

License

Issues

Please open new issues directly on the repository, we'll do our best to address those quickly.

Acknowledgements

Vision Transformers architectures were derived from facebookresearch/dino (Apache License 2.0), huggingface/pytorch-image-models (Apache License 2.0) and lmlpen/Nystromformer (MIT License) repositories.

hipt_mil multiple-instance learning algorithm was directly inspired from the HIPT repository (Apache License 2.0 with Commons Clause).

The following table describe the different libraries used in this work.

Name of the code library Version License Licensor Github repository
HIPT - Apache License 2.0 with Commons Clause Mahmood Lab https://github.com/mahmoodlab/HIPT/
dino - Apache License 2.0 Not specified https://github.com/facebookresearch/dino/
pytorch-image-models 0.9.0 Apache License 2.0 Ross Wightman https://github.com/huggingface/pytorch-image-models/
nystrom-attention 0.0.11 MIT License Phil Wang https://github.com/lucidrains/nystrom-attention/
einops 0.6.1 MIT License Alex Rogozhnikov https://github.com/arogozhnikov/einops/
hydra-core 1.3.2 MIT License Facebook, Inc. and its affiliates https://github.com/facebookresearch/hydra/
imageio 2.31.1 BSD-2 Clause Imageio developers https://github.com/imageio/imageio/
lifelines 0.27.7 MIT License Cameron Davidson-Pilon https://github.com/CamDavidsonPilon/lifelines/
loguru 0.7.0 MIT License Not specified https://github.com/Delgan/loguru/
openslide-python 1.3.0 GNU LGPL v2.1 Free Software Foundation https://github.com/openslide/openslide-python/
PyYAML 6.0.1 MIT License Ingy dΓΆt Net and Kirill Simonov https://github.com/yaml/pyyaml/
scikit-learn 1.3.0 BSD-3 Clause Scikit-learn developers https://github.com/scikit-learn/scikit-learn/
torch 1.13.1 Modified BSD Clause See LICENSE https://github.com/pytorch/pytorch/
torchvision 0.14.1 BSD-3 Clause Soumith Chintala https://github.com/pytorch/vision
tqdm 4.66.1 MIT and Mozilla Public License See LICENSE https://github.com/tqdm/tqdm/
dill 0.37.1 BSD-3 Clause The Uncertainty Quantification Foundation https://github.com/uqfoundation/dill/

The following table describe the different datasets from which either features or labels were extracted.

Name of the dataset License Dataset home page
NCT-CRC-HE-100K CC-BY 4.0 License https://zenodo.org/record/1214456
Camelyon16 CC0 1.0 License https://camelyon17.grand-challenge.org/Data/
Camelyon17-WILDS CC0 1.0 License https://wilds.stanford.edu/datasets/#camelyon17

The results published here are also partly based upon data generated by the TCGA Research Network: https://www.cancer.gov/tcga.

Citation

If you found our work useful in your research, please consider citing it at:

@article{Filiot2023ScalingSSLforHistoWithMIM,
    author       = {Alexandre Filiot and Ridouane Ghermi and Antoine Olivier and Paul Jacob and Lucas Fidon and Alice Mac Kain and Charlie Saillard and Jean-Baptiste Schiratti},
    title        = {Scaling Self-Supervised Learning for Histopathology with Masked Image Modeling},
    elocation-id = {2023.07.21.23292757},
    year         = {2023},
    doi          = {10.1101/2023.07.21.23292757},
    publisher    = {Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory Press},
    url          = {https://www.medrxiv.org/content/early/2023/07/26/2023.07.21.23292757},
    eprint       = {https://www.medrxiv.org/content/early/2023/07/26/2023.07.21.23292757.full.pdf},
    journal      = {medRxiv}
}