Wemyss, Thomas Alan;
Rana, Anubhuti;
Hillman, Sara L;
Nixon-Hill, Miranda;
Yadav, Kapil;
Dadhwal, Vatsla;
Leung, Terence S;
(2025)
Diagnosing anaemia via smartphone colorimetry of the eye in a population of pregnant women.
Physiological Measurement
, 13
(1)
, Article 01NT01. 10.1088/1361-6579/adab4d.
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Abstract
Objective. Screening for disease using a smartphone camera is an emerging tool for conditions such as jaundice and anaemia, which are associated with a colour change (yellowing in jaundice; pallor in anaemia) of the external tissues. Based on this, we aimed to test a technique to non-invasively screen for anaemia in a population highly affected by anaemia: pregnant women in India. In this group, anaemia can have severe health consequences for both the mother and child. Approach. Over 3 years of data collection, in 486 pregnant women in India, we attempted to replicate a previously successful smartphone imaging technique to screen for anaemia. Using smartphone images of the eye and eyelid, we compared two techniques (white balancing and ambient subtraction) to control for variation in ambient lighting, and then extracted 'redness' features from images, which we used as features to predict anaemia via statistical modelling. Main results. We found that we were not able to predict anaemia with enough accuracy to be clinically useful, at 89.6% sensitivity and 26.1% specificity. We consider the hypothesis that this may be due to pigmentation on the sclera and palpebral conjunctiva. Visual judgement showed that pigmentation on the sclera, which may affect the measured colour, is more prevalent in pregnant women in India than in preschool aged children in Ghana (a population previously studied in this context). When participants with subjectively judged visible scleral pigmentation are removed, ability to screen for anaemia using the smartphone images slightly improves (93.1% sensitivity, 28.6% specificity). Significance. These findings provide evidence to reinforce that applying smartphone imaging techniques to understudied populations in the real world requires caution—a promising result in one group may not necessarily transfer to another demographic.




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