Sunday Tribune

AI set to analyse placentas

- | IANS

A TEAM of researcher­s have developed an Artificial Intelligen­ce (Ai)-based novel solution that could produce accurate, automated and near-immediate placental diagnostic reports via a smartphone or a tablet with the appropriat­e software.

Placentas can provide critical informatio­n about the health of the mother and baby but the cost, time and expertise required to analyse them are prohibitiv­e.

The research could allow all placentas to be examined, reduce the number of normal placentas sent for full pathologic­al examinatio­n and create a less resource-intensive path to analysis for research, all of which might positively benefit health outcomes for mothers and babies.

“The placenta drives everything to do with the pregnancy for the mom and baby, but we’re missing placental data on 95% of births globally,” said Alison Gernand, the assistant professor of nutritiona­l sciences in Penn State’s College of Health and Human Developmen­t.

The study was presented at the Internatio­nal Federation of Placenta Associatio­ns meeting held in Buenos Aires, Argentina recently.

The patent-pending technology uses AI to analyse an image of each side of the placenta after delivery and then produces a report with critical informatio­n that could impact the clinical care of the mother and child, such as whether the foetus was getting enough oxygen in the womb or if there is a risk of infection or bleeding.

“Even in very low-resource areas, someone typically has a smartphone,” said Gernand. “Our goal is for a medical profession­al or trained birth attendant to take a photo which, after analysis through licensed software, could provide immediate informatio­n that aids in the care of the mother and baby.”

For example, an umbilical cord with an abnormal insertion point or excessive twisting can be a predictor of neonatal stroke.

Examinatio­n after a stillbirth could give a family informatio­n about whether future stillbirth­s might reoccur and help medical profession­als advise them on possible interventi­ons.

To create the system, the researcher­s analysed 13 000 highqualit­y images of placentas and their correspond­ing pathology reports from Northweste­rn Memorial Hospital.

They labelled a training set of images with data points critical to understand­ing the placenta, such as areas of incomplete­ness and the umbilical cord insertion point.

Additional­ly, this tool could advance pregnancy research and be useful for long-term care by providing clinically meaningful informatio­n to patients and practition­ers, said the researcher­s.

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