Quantitative Morphometry and Machine Learning Model to Explore Duodenal and Rectal Mucosal Tissue of Children with Environmental Enteric Dysfunction

Author:

Khan Marium1,Jamil Zehra2,Ehsan Lubaina1,Zulqarnain Fatima1,Srivastava Sanjana1,Siddiqui Saman3,Fernandes Philip1,Raghib Muhammad1,Sengupta Saurav4,Mujahid Zia3,Ahmed Zubair5,Idrees Romana5,Ahmed Sheraz2,Umrani Fayaz2,Iqbal Najeeha3,Moskaluk Christopher6,Raghavan Shyam6,Cheng Lin7,Moore Sean1,Ali Syed Asad3,Iqbal Junaid23,Syed Sana1348

Affiliation:

1. Department of Pediatrics, School of Medicine, University of Virginia, Charlottesville, Virginia;

2. Department of Biological and Biomedical Sciences, Aga Khan University, Karachi, Pakistan;

3. Department of Pediatrics and Child Health, Aga Khan University, Karachi, Pakistan;

4. School of Data Science, University of Virginia, Charlottesville, Virginia;

5. Department of Pathology and Laboratory Medicine, Aga Khan University, Karachi, Pakistan;

6. Department of Pathology, University of Virginia, Charlottesville, Virginia;

7. Department of Pathology, Rush University, Chicago, Illinois;

8. Department of Public Health Sciences, School of Medicine, University of Virginia, Charlottesville, Virginia

Abstract

ABSTRACT. Environmental enteric dysfunction (EED) is a subclinical enteropathy prevalent in resource-limited settings, hypothesized to be a consequence of chronic exposure to environmental enteropathogens, resulting in malnutrition, growth failure, neurocognitive delays, and oral vaccine failure. This study explored the duodenal and colonic tissues of children with EED, celiac disease, and other enteropathies using quantitative mucosal morphometry, histopathologic scoring indices, and machine learning–based image analysis from archival and prospective cohorts of children from Pakistan and the United States. We observed villus blunting as being more prominent in celiac disease than in EED, as shorter lengths of villi were observed in patients with celiac disease from Pakistan than in those from the United States, with median (interquartile range) lengths of 81 (73, 127) µm and 209 (188, 266) µm, respectively. Additionally, per the Marsh scoring method, celiac disease histologic severity was increased in the cohorts from Pakistan. Goblet cell depletion and increased intraepithelial lymphocytes were features of EED and celiac disease. Interestingly, the rectal tissue from cases with EED showed increased mononuclear inflammatory cells and intraepithelial lymphocytes in the crypts compared with controls. Increased neutrophils in the rectal crypt epithelium were also significantly associated with increased EED histologic severity scores in duodenal tissue. We observed an overlap between diseased and healthy duodenal tissue upon leveraging machine learning image analysis. We conclude that EED comprises a spectrum of inflammation in the duodenum, as previously described, and the rectal mucosa, warranting the examination of both anatomic regions in our efforts to understand and manage EED.

Publisher

American Society of Tropical Medicine and Hygiene

Subject

Virology,Infectious Diseases,Parasitology

Reference32 articles.

1. Environmental enteric dysfunction in children: a review;Syed,2016

2. Environmental enteropathy: critical implications of a poorly understood condition;Korpe,2012

3. Risk factors for malnutrition and environmental enteric dysfunction-you really are what you eat;Syed,2016

4. Environmental enteropathy, oral vaccine failure and growth faltering in infants in Bangladesh;Naylor,2015

5. Tissue is the issue: duodenal biopsies to elucidate gut structure and function among undernourished children in low-resource settings;Syed,2017

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