White blood cell differential count of maturation stages in bone marrow smear using dual-stage convolutional neural networks.

The white blood cell differential count of the bone marrow provides information concerning the distribution of immature and mature cells within maturation stages. The results of such examinations are important for the diagnosis of various diseases and for follow-up care after chemotherapy. However,...

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Main Authors: Jin Woo Choi, Yunseo Ku, Byeong Wook Yoo, Jung-Ah Kim, Dong Soon Lee, Young Jun Chai, Hyoun-Joong Kong, Hee Chan Kim
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Public Library of Science (PLoS) 2017-01-01
Series:PLoS ONE
Online Access:http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC5724840?pdf=render
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spelling doaj-0fd267ee1f9848318e1bb87f750a24162020-11-25T01:21:31ZengPublic Library of Science (PLoS)PLoS ONE1932-62032017-01-011212e018925910.1371/journal.pone.0189259White blood cell differential count of maturation stages in bone marrow smear using dual-stage convolutional neural networks.Jin Woo ChoiYunseo KuByeong Wook YooJung-Ah KimDong Soon LeeYoung Jun ChaiHyoun-Joong KongHee Chan KimThe white blood cell differential count of the bone marrow provides information concerning the distribution of immature and mature cells within maturation stages. The results of such examinations are important for the diagnosis of various diseases and for follow-up care after chemotherapy. However, manual, labor-intensive methods to determine the differential count lead to inter- and intra-variations among the results obtained by hematologists. Therefore, an automated system to conduct the white blood cell differential count is highly desirable, but several difficulties hinder progress. There are variations in the white blood cells of each maturation stage, small inter-class differences within each stage, and variations in images because of the different acquisition and staining processes. Moreover, a large number of classes need to be classified for bone marrow smear analysis, and the high density of touching cells in bone marrow smears renders difficult the segmentation of single cells, which is crucial to traditional image processing and machine learning. Few studies have attempted to discriminate bone marrow cells, and even these have either discriminated only a few classes or yielded insufficient performance. In this study, we propose an automated white blood cell differential counting system from bone marrow smear images using a dual-stage convolutional neural network (CNN). A total of 2,174 patch images were collected for training and testing. The dual-stage CNN classified images into 10 classes of the myeloid and erythroid maturation series, and achieved an accuracy of 97.06%, a precision of 97.13%, a recall of 97.06%, and an F-1 score of 97.1%. The proposed method not only showed high classification performance, but also successfully classified raw images without single cell segmentation and manual feature extraction by implementing CNN. Moreover, it demonstrated rotation and location invariance. These results highlight the promise of the proposed method as an automated white blood cell differential count system.http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC5724840?pdf=render
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Jin Woo Choi
Yunseo Ku
Byeong Wook Yoo
Jung-Ah Kim
Dong Soon Lee
Young Jun Chai
Hyoun-Joong Kong
Hee Chan Kim
spellingShingle Jin Woo Choi
Yunseo Ku
Byeong Wook Yoo
Jung-Ah Kim
Dong Soon Lee
Young Jun Chai
Hyoun-Joong Kong
Hee Chan Kim
White blood cell differential count of maturation stages in bone marrow smear using dual-stage convolutional neural networks.
PLoS ONE
author_facet Jin Woo Choi
Yunseo Ku
Byeong Wook Yoo
Jung-Ah Kim
Dong Soon Lee
Young Jun Chai
Hyoun-Joong Kong
Hee Chan Kim
author_sort Jin Woo Choi
title White blood cell differential count of maturation stages in bone marrow smear using dual-stage convolutional neural networks.
title_short White blood cell differential count of maturation stages in bone marrow smear using dual-stage convolutional neural networks.
title_full White blood cell differential count of maturation stages in bone marrow smear using dual-stage convolutional neural networks.
title_fullStr White blood cell differential count of maturation stages in bone marrow smear using dual-stage convolutional neural networks.
title_full_unstemmed White blood cell differential count of maturation stages in bone marrow smear using dual-stage convolutional neural networks.
title_sort white blood cell differential count of maturation stages in bone marrow smear using dual-stage convolutional neural networks.
publisher Public Library of Science (PLoS)
series PLoS ONE
issn 1932-6203
publishDate 2017-01-01
description The white blood cell differential count of the bone marrow provides information concerning the distribution of immature and mature cells within maturation stages. The results of such examinations are important for the diagnosis of various diseases and for follow-up care after chemotherapy. However, manual, labor-intensive methods to determine the differential count lead to inter- and intra-variations among the results obtained by hematologists. Therefore, an automated system to conduct the white blood cell differential count is highly desirable, but several difficulties hinder progress. There are variations in the white blood cells of each maturation stage, small inter-class differences within each stage, and variations in images because of the different acquisition and staining processes. Moreover, a large number of classes need to be classified for bone marrow smear analysis, and the high density of touching cells in bone marrow smears renders difficult the segmentation of single cells, which is crucial to traditional image processing and machine learning. Few studies have attempted to discriminate bone marrow cells, and even these have either discriminated only a few classes or yielded insufficient performance. In this study, we propose an automated white blood cell differential counting system from bone marrow smear images using a dual-stage convolutional neural network (CNN). A total of 2,174 patch images were collected for training and testing. The dual-stage CNN classified images into 10 classes of the myeloid and erythroid maturation series, and achieved an accuracy of 97.06%, a precision of 97.13%, a recall of 97.06%, and an F-1 score of 97.1%. The proposed method not only showed high classification performance, but also successfully classified raw images without single cell segmentation and manual feature extraction by implementing CNN. Moreover, it demonstrated rotation and location invariance. These results highlight the promise of the proposed method as an automated white blood cell differential count system.
url http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC5724840?pdf=render
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