Yueqin Li Jalali Lab/UCLA

Researchers at UCLA and NantWorks have developed an artificial intelligence-powered device that detects cancer cells in a few milliseconds—hundreds of times faster than previous methods. With that speed, the invention could make it possible to extract cancer cells from blood immediately after they are detected, which could in turn help prevent the disease from spreading in the body.

A paper about the advance was published in the journal Nature Scientific Reports.

The approach relies on two core technologies: deep learning and photonic time stretch. Deep learning is a type of machine learning, an technique in which algorithms are "trained" to perform tasks using large volumes of data. In deep learning, algorithms called are modeled after how the human brain works. Compared to other types of machine learning, deep learning has proven to be especially effective for recognizing and generating images, speech, music and videos.

Photonic time stretch is an ultrafast measurement technology that was invented at UCLA. Photonic time stretch instruments use ultrashort laser bursts to capture trillions of data points per second, more than 1,000 times faster than today's fastest microprocessors. The technology has helped scientists discover rare phenomena in laser physics and invent new types of biomedical instruments for 3-D microscopy, spectroscopy and other applications.

"Because of the extreme volume of precious data they generate, time-stretch instruments and deep learning are a match made in heaven," said senior author Bahram Jalali, a UCLA professor of electrical and computer engineering at the UCLA Samueli School of Engineering and a member of the California NanoSystems Institute at UCLA.

The system also uses a technology called imaging flow cytometry. Cytometry is the science of measuring cell characteristics; in imaging flow cytometry, those measurements are obtained by using a laser to take images of the cells one at a time as they flow through a carrier fluid. Although there are already techniques for categorizing cells in imaging flow cytometry, those techniques' processing steps occur so slowly that devices don't have time to physically separate cells from one another.

Building on their previous work, Jalali and his colleagues developed a pipeline which solves that problem by operating directly on the laser signals that are part of the imaging process, which eliminates the time-intensive processing steps of other techniques.

"We optimized the design of the deep neural network to handle the large amounts of data created by our time-stretch imaging flow cytometer—upgrading the performance of both the software and instrument," said Yueqin Li, a visiting doctoral student and the paper's first author.

Ata Mahjoubfar, a UCLA postdoctoral researcher and a co-author of the paper, said the technique allows the instrument to determine whether a cell is cancerous virtually instantaneously.

"We don't need to extract biophysical parameters of the anymore," he said. "Instead, deep neural networks analyze the raw data itself extremely quickly."

More information: Yueqin Li et al. Deep Cytometry: Deep learning with Real-time Inference in Cell Sorting and Flow Cytometry, Scientific Reports (2019). DOI: 10.1038/s41598-019-47193-6

Journal information: Scientific Reports