• Tohoku J. Exp. Med. · Jul 2021

    Deep Learning-Based Nuclear Lobe Count Method for Differential Count of Neutrophils.

    • Mayu Yabuta, Iori Nakamura, Haruhi Ida, Hiromi Masauzi, Kazunori Okada, Sanae Kaga, Keiko Miwa, and Nobuo Masauzi.
    • Graduate School of Health Sciences, Hokkaido University.
    • Tohoku J. Exp. Med. 2021 Jul 1; 254 (3): 199-206.

    AbstractDifferentiating neutrophils based on the count of nuclear lobulation is useful for diagnosing various hematological disorders, including megaloblastic anemia, myelodysplastic syndrome, and sepsis. It has been reported that one-fifth of sepsis-infected patients worldwide died between 1990 and 2017. Notably, fewer nuclear-lobed and stab-formed neutrophils develop in the peripheral blood during sepsis. This abnormality can serve as an early diagnostic criterion. However, testing this feature is a complex and time-consuming task that is rife with human error. For this reason, we apply deep learning to automatically differentiate neutrophil and nuclear lobulation counts and report the world's first small-scale pilot. Blood films are prepared using venous peripheral blood taken from four healthy volunteers and are stained with May-Grünwald Giemsa stain. Six-hundred 360 × 363-pixel images of neutrophils having five different nuclear lobulations are automatically captured by Cellavision DM-96, an automatic digital microscope camera. Images are input to an original architecture with five convolutional layers built on a deep learning neural-network platform by Sony, Neural Network Console. The deep learning system distinguishes the four groups (i.e., band-formed, two-, three-, and four- and five- segmented) of neutrophils with up to 99% accuracy, suggesting that neutrophils can be automatically differentiated based on their count of segmented nuclei using deep learning.

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