npj Precision Oncology (Jun 2024)

AI powered quantification of nuclear morphology in cancers enables prediction of genome instability and prognosis

  • John Abel,
  • Suyog Jain,
  • Deepta Rajan,
  • Harshith Padigela,
  • Kenneth Leidal,
  • Aaditya Prakash,
  • Jake Conway,
  • Michael Nercessian,
  • Christian Kirkup,
  • Syed Ashar Javed,
  • Raymond Biju,
  • Natalia Harguindeguy,
  • Daniel Shenker,
  • Nicholas Indorf,
  • Darpan Sanghavi,
  • Robert Egger,
  • Benjamin Trotter,
  • Ylaine Gerardin,
  • Jacqueline A. Brosnan-Cashman,
  • Aditya Dhoot,
  • Michael C. Montalto,
  • Chintan Parmar,
  • Ilan Wapinski,
  • Archit Khosla,
  • Michael G. Drage,
  • Limin Yu,
  • Amaro Taylor-Weiner

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1038/s41698-024-00623-9
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 8, no. 1
pp. 1 – 14

Abstract

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Abstract While alterations in nucleus size, shape, and color are ubiquitous in cancer, comprehensive quantification of nuclear morphology across a whole-slide histologic image remains a challenge. Here, we describe the development of a pan-tissue, deep learning-based digital pathology pipeline for exhaustive nucleus detection, segmentation, and classification and the utility of this pipeline for nuclear morphologic biomarker discovery. Manually-collected nucleus annotations were used to train an object detection and segmentation model for identifying nuclei, which was deployed to segment nuclei in H&E-stained slides from the BRCA, LUAD, and PRAD TCGA cohorts. Interpretable features describing the shape, size, color, and texture of each nucleus were extracted from segmented nuclei and compared to measurements of genomic instability, gene expression, and prognosis. The nuclear segmentation and classification model trained herein performed comparably to previously reported models. Features extracted from the model revealed differences sufficient to distinguish between BRCA, LUAD, and PRAD. Furthermore, cancer cell nuclear area was associated with increased aneuploidy score and homologous recombination deficiency. In BRCA, increased fibroblast nuclear area was indicative of poor progression-free and overall survival and was associated with gene expression signatures related to extracellular matrix remodeling and anti-tumor immunity. Thus, we developed a powerful pan-tissue approach for nucleus segmentation and featurization, enabling the construction of predictive models and the identification of features linking nuclear morphology with clinically-relevant prognostic biomarkers across multiple cancer types.