PICaSSO Histologic Remission Index (PHRI) in ulcerative colitis: development of a novel simplified histological score for monitoring mucosal healing and predicting clinical outcomes and its applicability in an artificial intelligence system
Author
Gui, XianyongBazarova, Alina
Del Amor, Rocìo
Vieth, Michael
De Hertogh, Gert
Villanacci, Vincenzo
Zardo, Davide
Parigi, Tommaso Lorenzo
Røyset, Elin Synnøve
Shivaji, Uday N
Monica, Melissa Anna Teresa
Mandelli, Giulio
Bhandari, Pradeep
Danese, Silvio
Ferraz, Jose G
Hayee, Bu'Hussain
Lazarev, Mark
Parra-Blanco, Adolfo
Pastorelli, Luca
Panaccione, Remo
Rath, Timo
Tontini, Gian Eugenio
Kiesslich, Ralf
Bisschops, Raf
Grisan, Enrico
Naranjo, Valery
Ghosh, Subrata
Iacucci, Marietta
Affiliation
University of Washington School of Medicine; University of Birmingham; University of Cologne; Universitat Politecnica de Valencia; Klinikum Bayreuth GmbH; Friedrich-Alexander-Universitat Erlangen-Nurnberg; KU Leuven University Hospitals Leuven; ASST Spedali Civili di Brescia; University Hospitals Birmingham NHS Foundation Trust; Humanitas University; Norwegian University of Science and Technology; National Institute of Health Research Birmingham Biomedical Research Unit; Queen Alexandra Hospital; Università Vita Salute San Raffaele; San Raffaele Hospital; University of Calgary Cumming School of Medicine; King's College Hospital NHS Foundation Trust; Johns Hopkins University; Nottingham University Hospitals NHS Trust; IRCCS Policlinico San Donato; University of Milan; Helios HSK; London South Bank University; Università degli Studi di Padova; University College CorkPublication date
2022-02-16Subject
Gastroenterology
Metadata
Show full item recordAbstract
Histological remission is evolving as an important treatment target in UC. We aimed to develop a simple histological index, aligned to endoscopy, correlated with clinical outcomes, and suited to apply to an artificial intelligence (AI) system to evaluate inflammatory activity. Methods: Using a set of 614 biopsies from 307 patients with UC enrolled into a prospective multicentre study, we developed the Paddington International virtual ChromoendoScopy ScOre (PICaSSO) Histologic Remission Index (PHRI). Agreement with multiple other histological indices and validation for inter-reader reproducibility were assessed. Finally, to implement PHRI into a computer-aided diagnosis system, we trained and tested a novel deep learning strategy based on a CNN architecture to detect neutrophils, calculate PHRI and identify active from quiescent UC using a subset of 138 biopsies. Results: PHRI is strongly correlated with endoscopic scores (Mayo Endoscopic Score and UC Endoscopic Index of Severity and PICaSSO) and with clinical outcomes (hospitalisation, colectomy and initiation or changes in medical therapy due to UC flare-up). A PHRI score of 1 could accurately stratify patients' risk of adverse outcomes (hospitalisation, colectomy and treatment optimisation due to flare-up) within 12 months. Our inter-reader agreement was high (intraclass correlation 0.84). Our preliminary AI algorithm differentiated active from quiescent UC with 78% sensitivity, 91.7% specificity and 86% accuracy. Conclusions: PHRI is a simple histological index in UC, and it exhibits the highest correlation with endoscopic activity and clinical outcomes. A PHRI-based AI system was accurate in predicting histological remission.Citation
Gui X, Bazarova A, Del Amor R, Vieth M, de Hertogh G, Villanacci V, Zardo D, Parigi TL, Røyset ES, Shivaji UN, Monica MAT, Mandelli G, Bhandari P, Danese S, Ferraz JG, Hayee B, Lazarev M, Parra-Blanco A, Pastorelli L, Panaccione R, Rath T, Tontini GE, Kiesslich R, Bisschops R, Grisan E, Naranjo V, Ghosh S, Iacucci M. PICaSSO Histologic Remission Index (PHRI) in ulcerative colitis: development of a novel simplified histological score for monitoring mucosal healing and predicting clinical outcomes and its applicability in an artificial intelligence system. Gut. 2022 May;71(5):889-898. doi: 10.1136/gutjnl-2021-326376. Epub 2022 Feb 16.Type
ArticleAdditional Links
https://gut.bmj.com/PMID
35173041Journal
GutPublisher
British Medical Associationae974a485f413a2113503eed53cd6c53
10.1136/gutjnl-2021-326376