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author | Sebastien Jodogne <s.jodogne@gmail.com> |
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date | Wed, 03 Jan 2018 15:32:44 +0100 |
parents | f8aa67501041 |
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.. _wsi: Whole-slide microscopic imaging =============================== .. contents:: The Orthanc project provides three **official tools** to support DICOM for whole-slide microscopic imaging (WSI): 1. A so-called "DICOM-izer" command-line tool that converts whole-slide images to DICOM series, following `Supplement 145 <ftp://medical.nema.org/medical/dicom/final/sup145_ft.pdf>`__. 2. A plugin that extends Orthanc with a Web viewer of whole-slide images for digital pathology. 3. Another command-line tool that converts a DICOM series stored inside Orthanc, to a standard hierarchical TIFF image. For general information, check out the `official homepage of the framework <http://www.orthanc-server.com/static.php?page=wsi>`__. Compilation ----------- .. highlight:: text The procedure to compile the WSI framework is similar of that for the :ref:`core of Orthanc <binaries>`. The following commands should work for every UNIX-like distribution (including GNU/Linux):: # Firstly, compile the command-line tools $ mkdir Applications/Build $ cd Applications/Build $ cmake .. -DSTATIC_BUILD=ON -DCMAKE_BUILD_TYPE=Release $ make # Secondly, compile the viewer plugin $ mkdir ../../ViewerPlugin/Build $ cd ../../ViewerPlugin/Build $ cmake .. -DSTATIC_BUILD=ON -DCMAKE_BUILD_TYPE=Release $ make The compilation will produce 3 binaries: * ``Applications/Build/OrthancWSIDicomizer``, which contains the DICOM-izer. * ``Applications/Build/OrthancWSIDicomToTiff``, which contains the DICOM-to-TIFF converter. * ``ViewerPlugin/Build/OrthancWSI``, which is a shared library containing the viewer plugin for Orthanc. Note that pre-compiled binaries for Microsoft Windows `are available <http://www.orthanc-server.com/browse.php?path=/whole-slide-imaging>`__. Usage of the plugin ------------------- .. highlight:: json You of course first have to :ref:`install Orthanc <compiling>`. Once Orthanc is installed, you must change the :ref:`configuration file <configuration>` to tell Orthanc where it can find the plugin: This is done by properly modifying the ``Plugins`` configuration option. You could for instance use the following configuration file under GNU/Linux:: { "Name" : "MyOrthanc", [...] "Plugins" : [ "/home/user/orthanc-wsi/ViewerPlugin/Build/libOrthancWSI.so" ] } Orthanc must of course be restarted after the modification of its configuration file. The WSI plugin has no specific configuration option. Once a :ref:`DICOM series <model-world>` is opened using :ref:`Orthanc Explorer <orthanc-explorer>`, a yellow button entitled ``Whole-Slide Imaging Viewer`` will show up for series corresponding to whole-slide images. This button will open the WSI viewer for that particular series. This behavior can be seen on the Orthanc Explorer interface running on our `WSI demonstration server <http://wsi.orthanc-server.com/orthanc/app/explorer.html>`__. Command-line tools ------------------ .. highlight:: text The command-line tools ``OrthancWSIDicomizer`` and ``OrthancWSIDicomToTiff`` provide documentation of all their options if started with the ``--help`` parameter:: $ ./OrthancWSIDicomizer --help $ ./OrthancWSIDicomToTiff --help In this section, we review the most common usages of these tools. Transcoding a DICOM image ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ The most simple usage consists in converting some whole-slide image to DICOM, then uploading it to Orthanc:: $ ./OrthancWSIDicomizer Source.tif This command will transcode some `hierarchical, tiled TIFF <https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/TIFF>`__ image called ``Source.tif``, and push the generated DICOM files to the default Orthanc server (running on ``localhost`` and listening to HTTP port ``8042``) using its :ref:`REST API <rest>`. The log of the command will give you the :ref:`identifier of the generated series <orthanc-ids>`, so that you can locate it in Orthanc Explorer. This conversion is fast, as no re-encoding takes place: If the source TIFF image contains JPEG tiles, these tiles will be simply written as such. Obviously, you can specify the parameters of the REST API of your target Orthanc server:: $ ./OrthancWSIDicomizer Source.tif --orthanc=http://localhost:8042/ --username=orthanc --password=orthanc It is also possible to write the DICOM instances directly onto some folder of the filesystem (the target folder must be existing):: $ ./OrthancWSIDicomizer Source.tif --folder=/tmp/dicomized/ This command will create a set of files entitled like ``/tmp/dicomized/wsi-XXXXXX.dcm``. You can modify this pattern using the command-line option ``--folder-pattern``. By default, the DICOM-izer will spread the output series as a set of DICOM files whose size stays below 10MB. This prevents the appearance of huge files, which speeds up further processing. This behavior can be controlled using the ``--max-size`` command-line option. Re-encoding a DICOM image ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ The section above explained how to transcode whole-slide images, without modifying the compression scheme of their individual tiles (which is most commonly JPEG). You can instruct the DICOM-izer to re-encode each and every individual tile as follows:: $ ./OrthancWSIDicomizer Source.tif --reencode=1 --compression=jpeg2000 This example would create a series of DICOM instances encoded using the JPEG2k transfer syntax (whose UID is ``1.2.840.10008.1.2.4.90``). As JPEG2k is not natively supported by many Web browsers, the Web viewer plugin would transparently convert such JPEG2k-encoded tiles to PNG images. It is also possible to re-encode the image so as to reduce disk space consumption by changing the JPEG quality:: $ ./OrthancWSIDicomizer Source.tif --reencode=1 --compression=jpeg --jpeg-quality=10 The DICOM-izer also allows to re-generate all the multi-resolution pyramid. This is extremely importantly to enhance the user experience of the Web interface, if the source image only features the finest zoom level of the whole-slide image:: $ ./OrthancWSIDicomizer Source.tif --pyramid=1 --smooth=1 The number of levels in the pyramid can be controlled using the ``--levels`` command-line option. The ``--smooth=1`` option tells the DICOM-izer to apply `Gaussian smoothing <https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gaussian_blur>`__ when re-scaling the image, in order to avoid the appearance of aliasing in the multi-resolution pyramid. This produces nicer images, at the price of higher computation time. All the examples described in this section are obviously much more CPU-intensive than simple transcoding. The DICOM-izer takes advantage in multi-threading to reduce the computation time. By default, it will use half the number of logical CPU cores that are available. This behavior can be fine-tuned using command-line option ``--threads``. Proprietary file formats ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ Out-of-the-box, the DICOM-izer supports standard hierarchical TIFF images. Some commonplace image formats (PNG and JPEG) can be DICOM-ized as well. However, whole-slide images can come in many proprietary file formats. To re-encode such images, the DICOM-izer relies upon the `OpenSlide toolbox <http://openslide.org/>`__. For this feature to work, you have to tell the command-line tool where it can find the OpenSlide shared library. GNU/Linux distributions generally provide packages containing the OpenSlide shared library (e.g. under Debian/Ubuntu, simply install the ``libopenslide0`` package):: $ ./OrthancWSIDicomizer --openslide=libopenslide.so CMU-1-JP2K-33005.svs Pre-compiled Microsoft Windows binaries of this shared library can be found on the `OpenSlide homepage <http://openslide.org/download/>`__ (Note that you should copy all .dll files from the OpenSlide package next to the OrthancWSIDicomizer executable):: $ ./OrthancWSIDicomizer --openslide=libopenslide-0.dll CMU-1-JP2K-33005.svs Note that this operation implies the re-encoding of the source image from the proprietary file format, which is much more time-consuming than simply transcoding a TIFF image. Specifying a DICOM dataset ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ So far, we have only been discussing the whole-slide image by itself, and not the :ref:`medical information <dicom-tags>` that is associated with each DICOM file. The DICOM tags that must be embedded inside the generated DICOM series can be specified using the user-friendly JSON file format. You would first generate a minimal, sample JSON dataset as follows:: $ ./OrthancWSIDicomizer --sample-dataset > dataset.json Secondly, you would edit the just-generated ``dataset.json`` file using any text editor (or any script interfaced with your RIS), so as to encode medical information associated with the image acquisition. Finally, tell the DICOM-izer where it can find the dataset when re-encoding or transcoding the image:: $ ./OrthancWSIDicomizer Source.tif --dataset=dataset.json Note that it is always a good idea to check whether all the required DICOM tags have been properly provided, e.g. by running the ``dciodvfy`` command-line tool provided by `David Clunie <http://www.dclunie.com/dicom3tools.html>`__ that checks the compliance of DICOM files. Converting DICOM to TIFF ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ The whole-slide imaging framework for Orthanc also provides a command-line tool that converts some DICOM series, as a standard hierarchical, tiled TIFF image. This is important if you wish to export some DICOM file to a framework that does not support DICOM Supplement 145. Here is how you would convert a whole-slide image stored in the default Orthanc server:: $ ./OrthancWSIDicomToTiff fdf53e42-06d7377a-c24c59fd-3704e72d-f4c75b68 Target.tif You just have to provide the :ref:`Orthanc identifier <orthanc-ids>` of the series of interest (that can be retrieved using :ref:`Orthanc Explorer <orthanc-explorer>` or the :ref:`REST API <rest>`), and the path to the target TIFF file. Similarly to the DICOM-izer, the command-line options ``--orthanc``, ``--username`` and ``--password`` can be used to specify the parameters of your Orthanc server. REST API -------- Besides providing an user interface, the plugin for whole-slide imaging also enrich the :ref:`REST API <rest>` of Orthanc with some new URIs, that are described in this section. Note that the Web interface of the plugin exclusively relies upon this enriched REST API in order to display whole-slide images using the `OpenLayers 3 <https://openlayers.org/>`__ JavaScript library. Information about a whole-slide image ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ You can check whether a DICOM series associated with some known :ref:`Orthanc ID <orthanc-ids>` ``id`` corresponds to a whole-slide image by calling the ``/wsi/pyramids/{id}`` URI. A HTTP status code 404 is returned if the series is *not* a whole-slide image:: $ curl -v http://localhost:8042/wsi/pyramids/ca2cc2ef-2dd8be12-0a4506ae-d565b7e1-a4ca9068 [...] < HTTP/1.1 404 Not Found However, if the identifier corresponds to a valid whole-slide image, you will get information about its multi-resolution pyramid, formatted using JSON:: $ curl http://localhost:8042/wsi/pyramids/f0ed5846-2ce36a70-d27bb5d3-6ed9dac2-ee638d85 { "ID" : "f0ed5846-2ce36a70-d27bb5d3-6ed9dac2-ee638d85", "Resolutions" : [ 1, 2, 4, 8, 16 ], "Sizes" : [ [ 10800, 5400 ], [ 5400, 2700 ], [ 2700, 1350 ], [ 1350, 675 ], [ 675, 338 ] ], "TileHeight" : 512, "TileWidth" : 512, "TilesCount" : [ [ 22, 11 ], [ 11, 6 ], [ 6, 3 ], [ 3, 2 ], [ 2, 1 ] ], "TotalHeight" : 5400, "TotalWidth" : 10800 } The size of the finest level of the pyramid is verbatim available from this output (in the example above, ``10,800 x 5,400`` pixels), as well as the size of each individual tile (``512 x 512`` pixels). The ``TilesCount`` gives, for each level of the pyramid (sorted in decreasing resolutions), the number of tiles along each dimension: In the example above, the coarsest level contains 2 tiles along the X axis, and 1 tile along the Y. Note that the interpretation of the whole-slide image is done transparently by the plugin, which frees the user from parsing each and every DICOM instance in the series. The medical information associated with the series or its instances can as usual be retrieved using the core :ref:`REST API <rest>` of Orthanc. Decoding the individual tiles ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ As discussed above, the ``/wsi/pyramids/{id}`` gives information about the number of tiles in each level of the multi-resolution pyramid associated with series ``id``. You can then retrieve the individual tiles of each level using the ``/wsi/tiles/{id}/{z}/{x}/{y}`` URI, where ``z`` corresponds to the level of interest, and (``x``, ``y``) the index of the tile of interest at this level. All of these indices start at zero, the level ``z=0`` corresponding to the finest level. For instance, here is how to retrieve the central tile of the finest level of the pyramid (that contains ``22 x 11`` tiles in our example):: $ curl http://localhost:8042/wsi/tiles/f0ed5846-2ce36a70-d27bb5d3-6ed9dac2-ee638d85/0/11/5 > tile.jpg $ identify ./tile.jpg ./tile.jpg JPEG 512x512 512x512+0+0 8-bit DirectClass 88.5KB 0.000u 0:00.000 As can be seen, the plugin has returned a JPEG image of size ``512 x 512``, which corresponds to the size of the tiles in this sample image. If trying to access a tile outside the image, the plugin will return with an HTTP status code that is not ``200 OK``. Similarly, here is how to retrieve a tile at the coarsest level (the pyramid has 5 levels in our example):: $ curl http://localhost:8042/wsi/tiles/f0ed5846-2ce36a70-d27bb5d3-6ed9dac2-ee638d85/4/0/0 > tile.jpg Depending upon the transfer syntax of the DICOM instances, the tile might not be encoded using JPEG. Indeed, if the transfer syntax is uncompressed (UID ``1.2.840.10008.1.2`` and friends) or JPEG2k lossless (UID ``1.2.840.10008.1.2.4.90``), the plugin will transparently re-encode the tile to PNG in order to avoid any destructive compression.