Abstract

One of the greatest strengths of artificial intelligence (AI) and machine learning (ML) approaches in health care is that their performance can be continually improved based on updates from automated learning from data. However, health care ML models are currently essentially regulated under provisions that were developed for an earlier age of slowly updated medical devices—requiring major documentation reshape and revalidation with every major update of the model generated by the ML algorithm. This creates minor problems for models that will be retrained and updated only occasionally, but major problems for models that will learn from data in real time or near real time. Regulators have announced action plans for fundamental changes in regulatory approaches. In this Viewpoint, we examine the current regulatory frameworks and developments in this domain. The status quo and recent developments are reviewed, and we argue that these innovative approaches to health care need matching innovative approaches to regulation and that these approaches will bring benefits for patients. International perspectives from the World Health Organization, and the Food and Drug Administration’s proposed approach, based around oversight of tool developers’ quality management systems and defined algorithm change protocols, offer a much-needed paradigm shift, and strive for a balanced approach to enabling rapid improvements in health care through AI innovation while simultaneously ensuring patient safety. The draft European Union (EU) regulatory framework indicates similar approaches, but no detail has yet been provided on how algorithm change protocols will be implemented in the EU. We argue that detail must be provided, and we describe how this could be done in a manner that would allow the full benefits of AI/ML-based innovation for EU patients and health care systems to be realized.

Highlights

  • Automated image analysis and segmentation [1], autonomous soft tissue suturing [2], and brain-machine interfaces [3]: these are technologies that until recently were only science fiction imaginings

  • machine learning (ML) is a subset of artificial intelligence (AI) approaches, and this Viewpoint deals with the subset of ML applications that are classified as medical devices

  • Many ML-based health care tools are classified in the European Union (EU) and United States as Software as a Medical Device

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Summary

JOURNAL OF MEDICAL INTERNET RESEARCH

Algorithm Change Protocols in the Regulation of Adaptive Machine Learning–Based Medical Devices. Stephen Gilbert, BSc, BVMS, MRes, PhD; Matthew Fenech, MD, PhD; Martin Hirsch, PhD; Shubhanan Upadhyay, MD; Andrea Biasiucci, PhD; Johannes Starlinger, MD, PhD

Introduction
Limitations of Current Approaches
The EU Artificial Intelligence Act
Conflicts of Interest
Full Text
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