Ameya Patil, Rebecca Salvatori, Lindsey Smith, Sarah M Jenkins, Andrew Cannon, Christopher P Hartley, Rondell P Graham, Roger K Moreira

Artificial intelligence‐based reticulin proportionate area – a novel histological outcome predictor in hepatocellular carcinoma

  • General Medicine
  • Histology
  • Pathology and Forensic Medicine

AimsReticulin stain is used routinely in the histological evaluation of hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC). The goal of this study was to assess whether the histological reticulin proportionate area (RPA) in HCCs predicts tumour‐related outcomes.Methods and resultsWe developed and validated a supervised artificial intelligence (AI) model that utilises a cloud‐based, deep‐learning AI platform (Aiforia Technologies, Helsinki, Finland) to specifically recognise and quantify the reticulin framework in normal livers and HCCs using routine reticulin staining. We applied this reticulin AI model to a cohort of consecutive HCC cases from patients undergoing curative resection between 2005 and 2015. A total of 101 HCC resections were included (median age = 68 years, 64 males, median follow‐up time = 49.9 months). AI model RPA reduction of > 50% (compared to normal liver tissue) was predictive of metastasis [hazard ratio (HR) = 3.76, P = 0.004, disease‐free survival (DFS, HR = 2.48, P < 0.001) and overall survival (OS), HR = 2.80, P = 0.001]. In a Cox regression model, which included clinical and pathological variables, RPA decrease was an independent predictor of DFS and OS and the only independent predictor of metastasis. Similar results were found in the moderately differentiated HCC subgroup (WHO grade 2), in which reticulin quantitative analysis was an independent predictor of metastasis, DFS and OS.ConclusionOur data indicate that decreased RPA is a strong predictor of various HCC‐related outcomes, including within the moderately differentiated subgroup. Reticulin, therefore, may represent a novel and important prognostic HCC marker, to be further explored and validated.

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