Title |
Computational pathology model to assess acute and chronic transformations of the tubulointerstitial compartment in renal allograft biopsies / |
Authors |
Augulis, Renaldas ; Rasmusson, Allan ; Laurinavičienė, Aida ; Jen, Kuang-Yu ; Laurinavičius, Arvydas |
DOI |
10.1038/s41598-024-55936-3 |
Full Text |
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Is Part of |
Scientific reports.. Berlin : Nature Portfolio. 2024, vol. 14, iss. 1, art. no. 5345, p. [1-12].. eISSN 2045-2322 |
Keywords [eng] |
Deep learning ; Digital image analysis ; Digital pathology ; Kidney ; Machine learning ; Morphometry ; Multivariate analysis ; Nephropathology |
Abstract [eng] |
Managing patients with kidney allografts largely depends on biopsy diagnosis which is based on semiquantitative assessments of rejection features and extent of acute and chronic changes within the renal parenchyma. Current methods lack reproducibility while digital image data-driven computational models enable comprehensive and quantitative assays. In this study we aimed to develop a computational method for automated assessment of histopathology transformations within the tubulointerstitial compartment of the renal cortex. Whole slide images of modified Picrosirius red-stained biopsy slides were used for the training (n = 852) and both internal (n = 172) and external (n = 94) tests datasets. The pipeline utilizes deep learning segmentations of renal tubules, interstitium, and peritubular capillaries from which morphometry features were extracted. Seven indicators were selected for exploring the intrinsic spatial interactions within the tubulointerstitial compartment. A principal component analysis revealed two independent factors which can be interpreted as representing chronic and acute tubulointerstitial injury. A K-means clustering classified biopsies according to potential phenotypes of combined acute and chronic transformations of various degrees. We conclude that multivariate analyses of tubulointerstitial morphometry transformations enable extraction of and quantification of acute and chronic components of injury. The method is developed for renal allograft biopsies; however, the principle can be applied more broadly for kidney pathology assessment. |
Published |
Berlin : Nature Portfolio |
Type |
Journal article |
Language |
English |
Publication date |
2024 |
CC license |
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