Introduction Digital pathology improves the standardization and reproducibility of kidney biopsy specimen assessment. We developed a pipeline allowing the analysis of many images without requiring human preprocessing and illustrate its… Click to show full abstract
Introduction Digital pathology improves the standardization and reproducibility of kidney biopsy specimen assessment. We developed a pipeline allowing the analysis of many images without requiring human preprocessing and illustrate its use with a simple algorithm for quantification of interstitial fibrosis on a large dataset of kidney allograft biopsy specimens. Methods Masson trichrome–stained images from kidney allograft biopsy specimens were used to train and validate a glomeruli detection algorithm using a VGG19 convolutional neural network and an automatic cortical region of interest (ROI) selection algorithm including cortical regions containing all predicted glomeruli. A positive-pixel count algorithm was used to quantify interstitial fibrosis on the ROIs and the association between automatic fibrosis and pathologist evaluation, estimated glomerular filtration rate (GFR) and allograft survival was assessed. Results The glomeruli detection (F1 score of 0.87) and ROIs selection (F1 score 0.83 [SD 0.13]) algorithms displayed high accuracy. The correlation between the automatic fibrosis quantification on manually and automatically selected ROIs was high (r = 1.00 [0.99–1.00]). Automatic fibrosis quantification was only moderately correlated with pathologists’ assessment and was not significantly associated with eGFR or allograft survival. Conclusion This pipeline can automatically and accurately detect glomeruli and select cortical ROIs that can easily be used to develop, validate, and apply image analysis algorithms.
               
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