MORPHFED: Federated Learning for Cross-institutional Blood Morphology Analysis
By: Gabriel Ansah , Eden Ruffell , Delmiro Fernandez-Reyes and more
Potential Business Impact:
Helps doctors diagnose blood diseases anywhere.
Automated blood morphology analysis can support hematological diagnostics in low- and middle-income countries (LMICs) but remains sensitive to dataset shifts from staining variability, imaging differences, and rare morphologies. Building centralized datasets to capture this diversity is often infeasible due to privacy regulations and data-sharing restrictions. We introduce a federated learning framework for white blood cell morphology analysis that enables collaborative training across institutions without exchanging training data. Using blood films from multiple clinical sites, our federated models learn robust, domain-invariant representations while preserving complete data privacy. Evaluations across convolutional and transformer-based architectures show that federated training achieves strong cross-site performance and improved generalization to unseen institutions compared to centralized training. These findings highlight federated learning as a practical and privacy-preserving approach for developing equitable, scalable, and generalizable medical imaging AI in resource-limited healthcare environments.
Similar Papers
Federated Learning for Large Models in Medical Imaging: A Comprehensive Review
Cryptography and Security
Helps doctors find sickness using shared patient scans.
Federated Learning for Medical Image Classification: A Comprehensive Benchmark
CV and Pattern Recognition
Helps doctors find diseases using private patient scans.
HemBLIP: A Vision-Language Model for Interpretable Leukemia Cell Morphology Analysis
CV and Pattern Recognition
Helps doctors see leukemia in blood cell pictures.