Severity: Warning
Message: file_get_contents(https://...@gmail.com&api_key=61f08fa0b96a73de8c900d749fcb997acc09&a=1): Failed to open stream: HTTP request failed! HTTP/1.1 429 Too Many Requests
Filename: helpers/my_audit_helper.php
Line Number: 197
Backtrace:
File: /var/www/html/application/helpers/my_audit_helper.php
Line: 197
Function: file_get_contents
File: /var/www/html/application/helpers/my_audit_helper.php
Line: 271
Function: simplexml_load_file_from_url
File: /var/www/html/application/helpers/my_audit_helper.php
Line: 3165
Function: getPubMedXML
File: /var/www/html/application/controllers/Detail.php
Line: 597
Function: pubMedSearch_Global
File: /var/www/html/application/controllers/Detail.php
Line: 511
Function: pubMedGetRelatedKeyword
File: /var/www/html/index.php
Line: 317
Function: require_once
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To advance precision medicine in pathology, robust AI-driven foundation models are increasingly needed to uncover complex patterns in large-scale pathology datasets, enabling more accurate disease detection, classification, and prognostic insights. However, despite substantial progress in deep learning and computer vision, the comparative performance and generalizability of these pathology foundation models across diverse histopathological datasets and tasks remain largely unexamined. In this study, we conduct a comprehensive benchmarking of 31 AI foundation models for computational pathology, including general vision models (VM), general vision-language models (VLM), pathology-specific vision models (Path-VM), and pathology-specific vision-language models (Path-VLM), evaluated over 41 tasks sourced from TCGA, CPTAC, external benchmarking datasets, and out-of-domain datasets. Our study demonstrates that Virchow2, a pathology foundation model, delivered the highest performance across TCGA, CPTAC, and external tasks, highlighting its effectiveness in diverse histopathological evaluations. We also show that Path-VM outperformed both Path-VLM and VM, securing top rankings across tasks despite lacking a statistically significant edge over vision models. Our findings reveal that model size and data size did not consistently correlate with improved performance in pathology foundation models, challenging assumptions about scaling in histopathological applications. Lastly, our study demonstrates that a fusion model, integrating top-performing foundation models, achieved superior generalization across external tasks and diverse tissues in histopathological analysis. These findings emphasize the need for further research to understand the underlying factors influencing model performance and to develop strategies that enhance the generalizability and robustness of pathology-specific vision foundation models across different tissue types and datasets.
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Source |
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http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC12132151 | PMC |
http://dx.doi.org/10.1101/2025.05.08.25327250 | DOI Listing |