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Watershed Encoder-Decoder Neural Network for Nuclei Segmentation of Breast Cancer Histology Images.

Bioengineering (Basel, Switzerland) 2026 Vol.13(2)

Majanga V, Mnkandla E, Moulla DK, Thotempudi S, Sena AD

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Recently, deep learning methods have seen major advancements and are preferred for medical image analysis.

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BibTeX ↓ RIS ↓
APA Majanga V, Mnkandla E, et al. (2026). Watershed Encoder-Decoder Neural Network for Nuclei Segmentation of Breast Cancer Histology Images.. Bioengineering (Basel, Switzerland), 13(2). https://doi.org/10.3390/bioengineering13020154
MLA Majanga V, et al.. "Watershed Encoder-Decoder Neural Network for Nuclei Segmentation of Breast Cancer Histology Images.." Bioengineering (Basel, Switzerland), vol. 13, no. 2, 2026.
PMID 41749694

Abstract

Recently, deep learning methods have seen major advancements and are preferred for medical image analysis. Clinically, deep learning techniques for cancer image analysis are among the main applications for early diagnosis, detection, and treatment. Consequently, segmentation of breast histology images is a key step towards diagnosing breast cancer. However, the use of deep learning methods for image analysis is constrained by challenging features in the histology images. These challenges include poor image quality, complex microscopic tissue structures, topological intricacies, and boundary/edge inhomogeneity. Furthermore, this leads to a limited number of images required for analysis. The U-Net model was introduced and gained significant traction for its ability to produce high-accuracy results with very few input images. Many modifications of the U-Net architecture exist. Therefore, this study proposes the watershed encoder-decoder neural network (WEDN) to segment cancerous lesions in supervised breast histology images. Pre-processing of supervised breast histology images via augmentation is introduced to increase the dataset size. The augmented dataset is further enhanced and segmented into the region of interest. Data enhancement methods such as thresholding, opening, dilation, and distance transform are used to highlight foreground and background pixels while removing unwanted parts from the image. Consequently, further segmentation via the connected component analysis method is used to combine image pixel components with similar intensity values and assign them their respective labeled binary masks. The watershed filling method is then applied to these labeled binary mask components to separate and identify the edges/boundaries of the regions of interest (cancerous lesions). This resultant image information is sent to the WEDN model network for feature extraction and learning via training and testing. Residual convolutional block layers of the WEDN model are the learnable layers that extract the region of interest (ROI), which is the cancerous lesion. The method was evaluated on 3000 images-watershed masks, an augmented dataset. The model was trained on 2400 training set images and tested on 600 testing set images. This proposed method produced significant results of 98.53% validation accuracy, 96.98% validation dice coefficient, and 97.84% validation intersection over unit (IoU) metric scores.