Paper ID: 2308.00920

Virtual histological staining of unlabeled autopsy tissue

Yuzhu Li, Nir Pillar, Jingxi Li, Tairan Liu, Di Wu, Songyu Sun, Guangdong Ma, Kevin de Haan, Luzhe Huang, Sepehr Hamidi, Anatoly Urisman, Tal Keidar Haran, William Dean Wallace, Jonathan E. Zuckerman, Aydogan Ozcan

Histological examination is a crucial step in an autopsy; however, the traditional histochemical staining of post-mortem samples faces multiple challenges, including the inferior staining quality due to autolysis caused by delayed fixation of cadaver tissue, as well as the resource-intensive nature of chemical staining procedures covering large tissue areas, which demand substantial labor, cost, and time. These challenges can become more pronounced during global health crises when the availability of histopathology services is limited, resulting in further delays in tissue fixation and more severe staining artifacts. Here, we report the first demonstration of virtual staining of autopsy tissue and show that a trained neural network can rapidly transform autofluorescence images of label-free autopsy tissue sections into brightfield equivalent images that match hematoxylin and eosin (H&E) stained versions of the same samples, eliminating autolysis-induced severe staining artifacts inherent in traditional histochemical staining of autopsied tissue. Our virtual H&E model was trained using >0.7 TB of image data and a data-efficient collaboration scheme that integrates the virtual staining network with an image registration network. The trained model effectively accentuated nuclear, cytoplasmic and extracellular features in new autopsy tissue samples that experienced severe autolysis, such as COVID-19 samples never seen before, where the traditional histochemical staining failed to provide consistent staining quality. This virtual autopsy staining technique can also be extended to necrotic tissue, and can rapidly and cost-effectively generate artifact-free H&E stains despite severe autolysis and cell death, also reducing labor, cost and infrastructure requirements associated with the standard histochemical staining.

Submitted: Aug 2, 2023