Publication | Open Access
Label-free SARS-CoV-2 detection and classification using phase imaging with computational specificity
64
Citations
41
References
2021
Year
Computational SpecificityConvolutional Neural NetworkEngineeringViral DiagnosticsNeural NetworkPathologyCovid-19Image ClassificationImage AnalysisComputational ImagingLabel-free Sars-cov-2 DetectionRadiologyMachine VisionMedical ImagingSynthetic Aperture RadarVirologyRadar ApplicationDeep LearningComputer VisionBioimage AnalysisBiomedical ImagingRadar Image ProcessingMedicine
Efforts to mitigate the COVID-19 crisis revealed that fast, accurate, and scalable testing is crucial for curbing the current impact and that of future pandemics. We propose an optical method for directly imaging unlabeled viral particles and using deep learning for detection and classification. An ultrasensitive interferometric method was used to image four virus types with nanoscale optical path-length sensitivity. Pairing these data with fluorescence images for ground truth, we trained semantic segmentation models based on U-Net, a particular type of convolutional neural network. The trained network was applied to classify the viruses from the interferometric images only, containing simultaneously SARS-CoV-2, H1N1 (influenza-A virus), HAdV (adenovirus), and ZIKV (Zika virus). Remarkably, due to the nanoscale sensitivity in the input data, the neural network was able to identify SARS-CoV-2 vs. the other viruses with 96% accuracy. The inference time for each image is 60 ms, on a common graphic-processing unit. This approach of directly imaging unlabeled viral particles may provide an extremely fast test, of less than a minute per patient. As the imaging instrument operates on regular glass slides, we envision this method as potentially testing on patient breath condensates. The necessary high throughput can be achieved by translating concepts from digital pathology, where a microscope can scan hundreds of slides automatically.
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