CVJan 11, 2024

Nucleus subtype classification using inter-modality learning

arXiv:2401.05602v23 citationsh-index: 38Medical Imaging
Originality Incremental advance
AI Analysis

This work addresses the need for automated annotation of diverse cell types in digital pathology, representing an incremental improvement over existing methods like the CoNIC Challenge.

The paper tackled the problem of classifying nucleus subtypes in histology images by using inter-modality learning to label previously un-labelable cell types on virtual H&E, achieving positive predictive values of 0.34 for helper T nuclei and 0.47 for progenitor nuclei.

Understanding the way cells communicate, co-locate, and interrelate is essential to understanding human physiology. Hematoxylin and eosin (H&E) staining is ubiquitously available both for clinical studies and research. The Colon Nucleus Identification and Classification (CoNIC) Challenge has recently innovated on robust artificial intelligence labeling of six cell types on H&E stains of the colon. However, this is a very small fraction of the number of potential cell classification types. Specifically, the CoNIC Challenge is unable to classify epithelial subtypes (progenitor, endocrine, goblet), lymphocyte subtypes (B, helper T, cytotoxic T), or connective subtypes (fibroblasts, stromal). In this paper, we propose to use inter-modality learning to label previously un-labelable cell types on virtual H&E. We leveraged multiplexed immunofluorescence (MxIF) histology imaging to identify 14 subclasses of cell types. We performed style transfer to synthesize virtual H&E from MxIF and transferred the higher density labels from MxIF to these virtual H&E images. We then evaluated the efficacy of learning in this approach. We identified helper T and progenitor nuclei with positive predictive values of $0.34 \pm 0.15$ (prevalence $0.03 \pm 0.01$) and $0.47 \pm 0.1$ (prevalence $0.07 \pm 0.02$) respectively on virtual H&E. This approach represents a promising step towards automating annotation in digital pathology.

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