Role of artificial intelligence in staging and assessing of treatment response in MASH patients

Front Med (Lausanne). 2024 Oct 21:11:1480866. doi: 10.3389/fmed.2024.1480866. eCollection 2024.

Abstract

Background and aims: The risk of disease progression in MASH increases proportionally to the pathological stage of fibrosis. This latter is evaluated through a semi-quantitative process, which has limited sensitivity in reflecting changes in disease or response to treatment. This study aims to test the clinical impact of Artificial Intelligence (AI) in characterizing liver fibrosis in MASH patients.

Methods: The study included 60 patients with clinical pathological diagnosis of MASH. Among these, 17 received a medical treatment and underwent a post-treatment biopsy. For each biopsy (n = 77) a Sirius Red digital slide (SR-WSI) was obtained. AI extracts >30 features from SR-WSI, including estimated collagen area (ECA) and entropy of collagen (EnC).

Results: AI highlighted that different histopathological stages are associated with progressive and significant increase of ECA (F2: 2.6% ± 0.4; F3: 5.7% ± 0.4; F4: 10.9% ± 0.8; p: 0.0001) and EnC (F2: 0.96 ± 0.05; F3: 1.24 ± 0.06; F4: 1.80 ± 0.11, p: 0.0001); disclosed the heterogeneity of fibrosis among pathological homogenous cases; revealed post treatment fibrosis modification in 76% of the cases (vs 56% detected by histopathology).

Conclusion: AI characterizes the fibrosis process by its true, continuous, and non-categorical nature, thus allowing for better identification of the response to anti-MASH treatment.

Keywords: MASH; artificial intelligence; fibrosis; liver; treatment.

Grants and funding

The author(s) declare that financial support was received for the research, authorship, and/or publication of this article. The research leading to these results has received funding from AIRC under IG 2020 – ID. 25087 project by P.I. Di Tommaso Luca and by Academic Funding UNIMIB 2023 (Laura Sironi, 2023-ATEQC-0075). This work was supported by “Ricerca Corrente” funding from the Italian Ministry of Health to IRCCS Humanitas Research Hospital for the cost of the publication.