Journal of Translational Medicine (Oct 2022)

Artificial intelligence for quantifying immune infiltrates interacting with stroma in colorectal cancer

  • Jing Yang,
  • Huifen Ye,
  • Xinjuan Fan,
  • Yajun Li,
  • Xiaomei Wu,
  • Minning Zhao,
  • Qingru Hu,
  • Yunrui Ye,
  • Lin Wu,
  • Zhenhui Li,
  • Xueli Zhang,
  • Changhong Liang,
  • Yingyi Wang,
  • Yao Xu,
  • Qian Li,
  • Su Yao,
  • Dingyun You,
  • Ke Zhao,
  • Zaiyi Liu

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1186/s12967-022-03666-3
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 20, no. 1
pp. 1 – 11

Abstract

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Abstract Background We proposed an artificial intelligence-based immune index, Deep-immune score, quantifying the infiltration of immune cells interacting with the tumor stroma in hematoxylin and eosin-stained whole-slide images of colorectal cancer. Methods A total of 1010 colorectal cancer patients from three centers were enrolled in this retrospective study, divided into a primary (N = 544) and a validation cohort (N = 466). We proposed the Deep-immune score, which reflected both tumor stroma proportion and the infiltration of immune cells in the stroma region. We further analyzed the correlation between the score and CD3+ T cells density in the stroma region using immunohistochemistry-stained whole-slide images. Survival analysis was performed using the Cox proportional hazard model, and the endpoint of the event was the overall survival. Result Patients were classified into 4-level score groups (score 1–4). A high Deep-immune score was associated with a high level of CD3+ T cells infiltration in the stroma region. In the primary cohort, survival analysis showed a significant difference in 5-year survival rates between score 4 and score 1 groups: 87.4% vs. 58.2% (Hazard ratio for score 4 vs. score 1 0.27, 95% confidence interval 0.15–0.48, P < 0.001). Similar trends were observed in the validation cohort (89.8% vs. 67.0%; 0.31, 0.15–0.62, < 0.001). Stratified analysis showed that the Deep-immune score could distinguish high-risk and low-risk patients in stage II colorectal cancer (P = 0.018). Conclusion The proposed Deep-immune score quantified by artificial intelligence can reflect the immune status of patients with colorectal cancer and is associate with favorable survival. This digital pathology-based finding might advocate change in risk stratification and consequent precision medicine.

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