219: POLARIS: Reliable AI Classification and Risk Stratification of Colorectal Polyps episode artwork

EPISODE · Apr 3, 2026 · 27 MIN

219: POLARIS: Reliable AI Classification and Risk Stratification of Colorectal Polyps

from Digital Pathology Podcast · host Aleksandra Zuraw, DVM, PhD

Send us Fan MailPaper Discussed in this Episode:Reliable classification of polyps based on artificial intelligence: a development and validation study. Julbø FMI, Henriksen AL, et al. eClinicalMedicine 2026;93: 103826.Episode Summary:In this journal club deep dive, we explore a groundbreaking 2026 study that tackles the massive bottleneck in gastrointestinal pathology caused by successful colorectal screening programs. We examine POLARIS, an AI triage system designed to safely clear over 50% of a pathologist's routine workload. But what happens when the algorithm fiercely disagrees with the human diagnosis? In a blinded showdown, the AI proves it's not just an efficiency tool—it might just be the ultimate safety net for catching high-risk cancer cells that human eyes overlook.In This Episode, We Cover:• The Pathology Bottleneck: Why the success of colorectal screening programs is drowning labs in biopsy slides, and how the subjective, visual nature of diagnosing polyps leads to dangerous inter-observer variability.• The 5:2 Triage Strategy: How POLARIS categorizes gigapixel slide images into five biological classes (0 to 4) and translates them into two highly actionable buckets: "Review" (the complex and malignant) and "No Review Required" (normal tissue and routine tubular adenomas with low-grade dysplasia).• Beating the "Clever Hans" Effect: How researchers prevented the AI from "cheating" by recognizing the digital fingerprints of different scanner brands, like Aperio vs. NanoZoomer. By using an image registration tool called elastix to perfectly align slides scanned on both machines, they heavily penalized the algorithm mathematically for relying on color profiles, forcing it to focus purely on biological morphology.• The Showdown - Humans vs. AI: A blinded consensus review was conducted on 40 highly contentious cases where the AI aggressively disagreed with the original patient medical record. Three independent expert pathologists were brought in to break the tie without knowing the AI's or the original doctor's diagnosis.• The Shocking Results: The expert panel sided with the AI over the original human diagnosis in a staggering 92.5% of the disputed cases, proving the established clinical "ground truth" isn't infallible.• The RGBA Heat Map: How POLARIS functions as an active assistant, leaving normal tissue transparent (scaling the alpha channel to zero) while highlighting severe cellular atypia in glowing red, acting as a hyper-accurate topographical map for pathologists.Key Takeaway:AI in digital pathology isn't about autonomously replacing human experts; it's a hyper-sensitive navigational aid. By safely managing the flood of routine low-grade cases and accurately highlighting hidden high-risk dysplasias that exhausted human eyes miss, POLARIS corrects human errors and elevates the baseline standard of diagnostic care across the entire pipeline.Support the showGet the "Digital Pathology 101" FREE E-book and join us!

Send us Fan Mail Paper Discussed in this Episode: Reliable classification of polyps based on artificial intelligence: a development and validation study. Julbø FMI, Henriksen AL, et al. eClinicalMedicine 2026;93: 103826. Episode Summary: In this journal club deep dive, we explore a groundbreaking 2026 study that tackles the massive bottleneck in gastrointestinal pathology caused by successful colorectal screening programs. We examine POLARIS, an AI triage system designed to safely clear over ...

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219: POLARIS: Reliable AI Classification and Risk Stratification of Colorectal Polyps

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This episode was published on April 3, 2026.

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Send us Fan MailPaper Discussed in this Episode:Reliable classification of polyps based on artificial intelligence: a development and validation study. Julbø FMI, Henriksen AL, et al. eClinicalMedicine 2026;93: 103826.Episode Summary:In this journal...

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