Nuclear membrane irregularity in high-grade urothelial carcinoma cells can be measured by using circularity and solidity as morphometric shape definitions in digital image analysis of urinary tract cytology specimens

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

Abstract

Background: The Paris System for Reporting Urine Cytology defines objective (elevated nuclear/cytoplasmic ratio ≥0.7) and subjective (nuclear membrane irregularity, hyperchromicity, and coarse chromatin) cytomorphologic criteria to identify conventional high-grade urothelial carcinoma (HGUC) cells. Digital image analysis allows quantitative and objective measurement of these subjective criteria. In this study, digital image analysis was used to quantitate nuclear membrane irregularity in HGUC cells. Methods: Whole-slide images of HGUC urine specimens were acquired, and HGUC nuclei were manually annotated using the open-source bioimage analysis software QuPath. Custom scripts were used to calculate nuclear morphometrics and perform downstream analysis. Results: In total, 1395 HGUC cell nuclei were annotated across 24 HGUC specimens (48.1 ± 6.0 nuclei per case) using both pixel-level and smooth annotation approaches. Nuclear membrane irregularity was estimated by calculating nuclear circularity and solidity. Annotating at pixel-level resolution artifactually increases nuclear membrane perimeter, thus smoothing is necessary to better approximate a pathologist's assessment of nuclear membrane irregularity. After smoothing, nuclear circularity and solidity discriminate between HGUC cell nuclei with visually apparent differences in nuclear membrane irregularity. Conclusions: Nuclear membrane irregularity defined by The Paris System for Reporting Urine Cytology is inherently subjective. This study identifies nuclear morphometrics that visually correlate with nuclear membrane irregularity. HGUC specimens show intercase variation in nuclear morphometrics, with some nuclei appearing remarkably regular while others show marked irregularity. A small population of irregular nuclei generates most of the intracase variation in nuclear morphometrics. These results highlight nuclear membrane irregularity as an important, but not definitive, cytomorphologic criterion in HGUC diagnosis.

Original languageEnglish (US)
Pages (from-to)351-359
Number of pages9
JournalCancer Cytopathology
Volume131
Issue number6
DOIs
StatePublished - Jun 2023

Keywords

  • bladder
  • cancer
  • cytopathology
  • morphometry
  • urothelium

ASJC Scopus subject areas

  • Oncology
  • Cancer Research

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