Proscia Launches AI-Powered Digital Pathology Solution for Dermatopathology

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Proscia, a leading provider of digital pathology software, released DermAI™, the first in its series of AI applications that advance the practice of pathology. A module on Proscia’s Concentriq™ platform, DermAI leverages deep learning to pre-screen and classify skin biopsies to help reduce costly errors and improve laboratory quality and efficiency as the number of medical professionals entering the field of pathology continues to decline.

The standard of care for diagnosing the 25 million skin biopsies taken in the US every year has been based on a pathologist’s interpretation of patterns in tissue using a microscope. This 150-year-old manual and subjective practice cannot keep pace with the increasing demand for pathology diagnosis or deliver critical data in the promise of precision treatment. Proscia’s DermAI uses deep learning to read and automatically classify hundreds of variants of skin diseases into pre-diagnostic categories to improve the confidence, quality, and speed of pathology.

“DermAI demonstrates a high level of accuracy in categorizing common diagnoses,” said Dr. Kiran Motaparthi, from the Department of Dermatology at University of Florida College of Medicine. “As a dermatopathologist who seeks to prioritize and focus time on challenging cases, this is exciting technology.”

Proscia trained and tested the DermAI algorithm using patient biopsies from leading academic and commercial derm laboratories including Cockerell Dermatopathology, Dermatopathology Laboratory of Central States, University of Florida, and Thomas Jefferson University Hospital. This multi-site study successfully validated the performance of DermAI using over 20,000 patient biopsy slides. Proscia intends to submit DermAI to the FDA for review to use in clinical diagnosis.

“To date, attempts to apply AI to pathology have been engineered in isolated development environments using toy datasets. The challenge in fulfilling the promise of deep learning in diagnostic medicine is bringing to market a solution that can perform in the real world where we face tremendous variability among labs, systems, and specimen. Proscia is the first to deliver on this promise,” explained David West, CEO of Proscia. “We could not be more delighted to be celebrating this industry milestone. Now, with our first proven solution in market, we are able to scale out much of our IP to accelerate the roll-out of additional disease-specific AI-based modules.”

Capabilities central to the DermAI offering include:

  • Intelligent workload balancing and case prioritization – enables the lab to sort, triage, and otherwise prioritize cases. It optimizes how cases are distributed to the various dermatopathologists in a lab – by subject matter expertise, by order of cases to examine, or even to create continuity so investigators maximize their focus on high-impact cases.
  • Automated QA and 100% AI re-review – analyzes a lab’s entire caseload, providing an AI-based interpretation for every case. Running in the background before or after pathologist review, DermAI provides an automated second layer of quality review across the lab.
  • Enhanced technical component reporting – technical component (labwork) and professional component (pathologist work) are billable services offered by anatomic pathology labs. DermAI allows a dermatopathology lab to provide additional insight into the labwork it delivers. This added value may guide when to let the lab handle the professional component and when to perform it in-house.

The flexible nature of the DermAI software allows laboratories to take advantage of multiple use cases in a variety of configurations based on their current workflows, preference of the pathologist, and the needs of their clients. It also seamlessly integrates with most laboratory information system (LIS) platforms, making DermAI easy to fit into existing lab processes.

Dr. Thomas G. Olsen, founder of Dermatopathology Laboratory of Central States and an investigator in the validation study, collaborated with Proscia on the design and clinical requirements for DermAI. “The true promise of digital pathology lies in deep learning, which will transform the practice of pathology for the first time since the introduction of the microscope,” commented Dr. Olsen. “It’s exciting to have been part of moving AI-enabled digital pathology beyond academic efforts and into real-world practice applications.”

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