IVCVMay 13, 2024

Rethinking Histology Slide Digitization Workflows for Low-Resource Settings

arXiv:2405.08169v13 citationsh-index: 6Has CodeMICCAI
Originality Incremental advance
AI Analysis

This addresses health equity gaps by making slide digitization affordable for telepathology and education in poor regions, though it's an incremental improvement on existing digitization methods.

The authors tackled the problem of histology slide digitization being too expensive for low-resource settings by developing a cloud workflow that creates scanner-quality whole-slide images from low-quality microscope videos, demonstrating efficacy on diseases like Cutaneous Leishmaniasis and other pathologies with accessible code and a platform.

Histology slide digitization is becoming essential for telepathology (remote consultation), knowledge sharing (education), and using the state-of-the-art artificial intelligence algorithms (augmented/automated end-to-end clinical workflows). However, the cumulative costs of digital multi-slide high-speed brightfield scanners, cloud/on-premises storage, and personnel (IT and technicians) make the current slide digitization workflows out-of-reach for limited-resource settings, further widening the health equity gap; even single-slide manual scanning commercial solutions are costly due to hardware requirements (high-resolution cameras, high-spec PC/workstation, and support for only high-end microscopes). In this work, we present a new cloud slide digitization workflow for creating scanner-quality whole-slide images (WSIs) from uploaded low-quality videos, acquired from cheap and inexpensive microscopes with built-in cameras. Specifically, we present a pipeline to create stitched WSIs while automatically deblurring out-of-focus regions, upsampling input 10X images to 40X resolution, and reducing brightness/contrast and light-source illumination variations. We demonstrate the WSI creation efficacy from our workflow on World Health Organization-declared neglected tropical disease, Cutaneous Leishmaniasis (prevalent only in the poorest regions of the world and only diagnosed by sub-specialist dermatopathologists, rare in poor countries), as well as other common pathologies on core biopsies of breast, liver, duodenum, stomach and lymph node. The code and pretrained models will be accessible via our GitHub (https://github.com/nadeemlab/DeepLIIF), and the cloud platform will be available at https://deepliif.org for uploading microscope videos and downloading/viewing WSIs with shareable links (no sign-in required) for telepathology and knowledge sharing.

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