Tauopathies are a category of neurodegenerative diseases characterized by the presence of abnormal tau protein-containing neurofibrillary tangles (NFTs). NFTs are universally observed in aging, occurring with or without the concomitant accumulation of amyloid-beta peptide (Aβ) in plaques that typifies Alzheimer disease (AD), the most common tauopathy. Primary age-related tauopathy (PART) is an Aβ-independent process that affects the medial temporal lobe in both cognitively normal and impaired subjects. Determinants of symptomology in subjects with PART are poorly understood and require clinicopathologic correlation; however, classical approaches to staging tau pathology have limited quantitative reproducibility. As such, there is a critical need for unbiased methods to quantitatively analyze tau pathology on the histological level. Artificial intelligence (AI)-based convolutional neural networks (CNNs) generate highly accurate and precise computer vision assessments of digitized pathology slides, yielding novel histology metrics at scale. Here, we performed a retrospective autopsy study of a large cohort (n = 706) of human post-mortem brain tissues from normal and cognitively impaired elderly individuals with mild or no Aβ plaques (average age of death of 83.1 yr, range 55–110). We utilized a CNN trained to segment NFTs on hippocampus sections immunohistochemically stained with antisera recognizing abnormal hyperphosphorylated tau (p-tau), which yielded metrics of regional NFT counts, NFT positive pixel density, as well as a novel graph-theory based metric measuring the spatial distribution of NFTs. We found that several AI-derived NFT metrics significantly predicted the presence of cognitive impairment in both the hippocampus proper and entorhinal cortex (p < 0.0001). When controlling for age, AI-derived NFT counts still significantly predicted the presence of cognitive impairment (p = 0.04 in the entorhinal cortex; p = 0.04 overall). In contrast, Braak stage did not predict cognitive impairment in either age-adjusted or unadjusted models. These findings support the hypothesis that NFT burden correlates with cognitive impairment in PART. Furthermore, our analysis strongly suggests that AI-derived metrics of tau pathology provide a powerful tool that can deepen our understanding of the role of neurofibrillary degeneration in cognitive impairment.
The diagnosis of Parkinson’s disease (PD) is challenging at all stages due to variable symptomatology, comorbidities, and mimicking conditions. Postmortem assessment remains the gold standard for a definitive diagnosis. While it is well recognized that PD manifests pathologically in the central nervous system with aggregation of α-synuclein as Lewy bodies and neurites, similar Lewy-type synucleinopathy (LTS) is additionally found in the peripheral nervous system that may be useful as an antemortem biomarker. We have previously found that detection of LTS in submandibular gland (SMG) biopsies is sensitive and specific for advanced PD; however, the sensitivity is suboptimal especially for early-stage disease. Further, visual microscopic assessment of biopsies by a neuropathologist to identify LTS is impractical for large-scale adoption. Here, we trained and validated a convolutional neural network (CNN) for detection of LTS on 283 digital whole slide images (WSI) from 95 unique SMG biopsies. A total of 8,450 LTS and 35,066 background objects were annotated following an inter-rater reliability study with Fleiss Kappa = 0.72. We used transfer learning to train a CNN model to classify image patches (151 × 151 pixels at 20× magnification) with and without the presence of LTS objects. The trained CNN model showed the following performance on image patches: sensitivity: 0.99, specificity: 0.99, precision: 0.81, accuracy: 0.99, and F-1 score: 0.89. We further tested the trained network on 1230 naïve WSI from the same cohort of research subjects comprising 42 PD patients and 14 controls. Logistic regression models trained on features engineered from the CNN predictions on the WSI resulted in sensitivity: 0.71, specificity: 0.65, precision: 0.86, accuracy: 0.69, and F-1 score: 0.76 in predicting clinical PD status, and 0.64 accuracy in predicting PD stage, outperforming expert neuropathologist LTS density scoring in terms of sensitivity but not specificity. These findings demonstrate the practical utility of a CNN detector in screening for LTS, which can translate into a computational tool to facilitate the antemortem tissue-based diagnosis of PD in clinical settings.
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