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arxiv: 2605.22145 · v1 · pith:CAZIDCNLnew · submitted 2026-05-21 · 🧬 q-bio.OT

Persistent Homology as a Morphological Signature of Fibrin Networks

Pith reviewed 2026-05-22 02:09 UTC · model grok-4.3

classification 🧬 q-bio.OT
keywords persistent homologyfibrin networkstopological data analysisconfocal microscopyoesophageal cancerperioperative periodblood coagulationnetwork topology
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The pith

Persistent homology analysis of fibrin networks from esophageal cancer patients finds no significant topological differences across surgery or between treatment groups.

A machine-rendered reading of the paper's core claim, the machinery that carries it, and where it could break.

This paper tests whether persistent homology can extract useful morphological signatures from three-dimensional confocal microscopy images of fibrin networks in blood samples. The authors collected z-stacks from patients undergoing curative surgery for esophageal cancer, cropped each stack to a central region, and compared topological features between a standard-care group and an intervention group at multiple perioperative time points. Statistical comparisons revealed no significant changes in network topology over time and no consistent distinctions between the two groups. A sympathetic reader would care because fibrin network structure influences coagulation, bleeding risk, and thrombosis in surgical oncology patients. The work therefore supplies a concrete case study of topological data analysis applied to a clinical microscopy dataset with a clear negative result.

Core claim

We applied persistent homology to cropped central regions of z-stacks from high-resolution confocal microscopy images of fibrin networks formed in blood samples from esophageal cancer patients. After extracting persistence diagrams and deriving quantitative topological descriptors, we performed statistical tests that showed no significant differences in fibrin network topology across the perioperative period and no consistent differences between the standard and intervention groups.

What carries the argument

Persistent homology computed on the three-dimensional voxel data of fibrin networks, which records the birth and death scales of topological features such as connected components and loops as the filtration threshold varies.

If this is right

  • Fibrin network topology remains statistically stable across the perioperative window in this patient population.
  • The intervention produces no detectable topological alteration in clot structure relative to standard care.
  • Central cropping yields topological statistics that do not differ meaningfully from those expected for the broader network.
  • Persistent homology descriptors alone do not distinguish the clinical conditions examined here.

Where Pith is reading between the lines

These are editorial extensions of the paper, not claims the author makes directly.

  • If topology is truly invariant, then any perioperative changes in clotting behavior must arise from factors outside network connectivity, such as protein concentration or platelet activity.
  • The same persistent-homology pipeline could be applied to fibrin networks from patients with other coagulopathies to test whether topological signatures appear under different clinical conditions.
  • Pairing persistent homology with geometric measures such as fiber thickness or density might increase sensitivity to differences that topology alone misses.

Load-bearing premise

That the central cropped portion of each z-stack is representative of the overall network topology throughout the imaged volume.

What would settle it

Recomputing persistent homology on the full uncropped z-stacks and finding statistically significant topological differences between time points or groups would directly challenge the representativeness of the cropping step.

read the original abstract

We present an investigation of the applicability of topological data analysis (TDA) to the study of high-resolution confocal microscopy images of fibrin network structures from patients with oesophageal cancer undergoing intended curative surgery. Investigation of clot structure brings new knowledge about blood coagulation, risk of bleeding, and thrombosis in this group of patients. Images of fibrin network formation in the collected blood samples were captured by confocal microscopy and three-dimensional z-stacks were analysed. Each z-stack was cropped to a centre region for analysis, the validity of which is assessed in detail. Overall, we found no significant differences in fibrin network topology across the perioperative period, and no consistent differences in network structure between the standard and intervention groups.

Editorial analysis

A structured set of objections, weighed in public.

Desk editor's note, referee report, simulated authors' rebuttal, and a circularity audit. Tearing a paper down is the easy half of reading it; the pith above is the substance, this is the friction.

Referee Report

1 major / 2 minor

Summary. The manuscript applies persistent homology from topological data analysis to 3D confocal z-stack images of fibrin networks formed in blood samples from oesophageal cancer patients undergoing curative surgery. Each z-stack is cropped to a central region (with a detailed validity assessment), topological features such as Betti curves and persistence diagrams are extracted, and the central claim is that no significant differences exist in network topology across the perioperative period or between standard and intervention groups.

Significance. If the null result is robust, the work establishes persistent homology as a viable morphological signature for fibrin networks and indicates topological stability in this patient cohort, with potential implications for perioperative coagulation management. The detailed cropping validation and empirical image-based approach (no free parameters or circular derivations) are strengths that support reproducibility.

major comments (1)
  1. [Methods - Cropping] Methods section on z-stack cropping and validity assessment: the headline null result (no significant differences across periods or groups) is computed exclusively on centrally cropped sub-volumes. Although validity is assessed in detail, the assessment does not include a direct quantitative comparison (e.g., Wasserstein distances between persistence diagrams or Betti curve differences) of central versus peripheral or full-volume regions; this leaves open the possibility that spatial heterogeneity in fibrin formation masks true differences, directly affecting the central claim.
minor comments (2)
  1. [Abstract] Abstract: the statement of findings would be strengthened by inclusion of specific quantitative details such as sample sizes per group/time point, exact statistical tests used, and effect sizes or p-value thresholds for the 'no significant differences' conclusion.
  2. [Results] Results section: clarify the precise topological invariants (e.g., which Betti numbers or persistence intervals) were used for the group comparisons and whether multiple-testing correction was applied.

Simulated Author's Rebuttal

1 responses · 0 unresolved

We thank the referee for their constructive review and for highlighting the potential implications of our null findings. We address the single major comment point by point below.

read point-by-point responses
  1. Referee: Methods section on z-stack cropping and validity assessment: the headline null result (no significant differences across periods or groups) is computed exclusively on centrally cropped sub-volumes. Although validity is assessed in detail, the assessment does not include a direct quantitative comparison (e.g., Wasserstein distances between persistence diagrams or Betti curve differences) of central versus peripheral or full-volume regions; this leaves open the possibility that spatial heterogeneity in fibrin formation masks true differences, directly affecting the central claim.

    Authors: We agree that incorporating direct topological comparisons would provide stronger evidence that the central cropping does not obscure potential differences due to spatial heterogeneity. In the revised manuscript we will add quantitative comparisons of persistence diagrams (via Wasserstein distances) and Betti curves between the central sub-volumes, peripheral regions, and full z-stacks. These additional analyses will be presented alongside the existing validity assessment to confirm that the central crop is representative of the overall network topology in this dataset. revision: yes

Circularity Check

0 steps flagged

No circularity: empirical TDA application to image data

full rationale

The paper is an empirical study applying persistent homology to cropped confocal z-stack images of fibrin networks, followed by statistical tests for group and time-point differences. No derivation chain exists that reduces a claimed result to its own inputs by construction, no fitted parameters are renamed as predictions, and no self-citation chain supplies a load-bearing uniqueness theorem or ansatz. The central negative result follows directly from feature extraction and hypothesis testing on external image data; the cropping step is a pre-processing choice whose representativeness is separately assessed rather than assumed tautologically. This is a standard self-contained data-analysis workflow with no self-definitional or fitted-input circularity.

Axiom & Free-Parameter Ledger

0 free parameters · 1 axioms · 0 invented entities

No free parameters or invented entities; relies on established TDA and microscopy techniques.

axioms (1)
  • standard math Assumptions underlying persistent homology computation on 3D image data
    Standard filtration and homology calculations in TDA.

pith-pipeline@v0.9.0 · 8239 in / 1058 out tokens · 58484 ms · 2026-05-22T02:09:49.262153+00:00 · methodology

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Reference graph

Works this paper leans on

19 extracted references · 19 canonical work pages

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