Abstract

PurposeThe aim of our study is to evaluate artificial intelligence (AI) support in pelvic fracture diagnosis on X-rays, focusing on performance, workflow integration and radiologists’ feedback in a spoke emergency hospital. Materials and methodsBetween August and November 2021, a total of 235 sites of fracture or suspected fracture were evaluated and enrolled in the prospective study. Radiologist’s specificity, sensibility accuracy, positive and negative predictive values were compared to AI. Cohen's kappa was used to calculate the agreement between AI and radiologist. We also reviewed the AI workflow integration process, focusing on potential issues and assessed radiologists’ opinion on AI via a survey. ResultsThe radiologist performance in accuracy, sensitivity and specificity was better than AI but McNemar test demonstrated no statistically significant difference between AI and radiologist’s performance (p = 0.32). Calculated Cohen’s K of 0.64. ConclusionContrary to expectations, our preliminary results did not prove a real improvement of patient outcome nor in reporting time but demonstrated AI high NPV (94,62%) and non-inferiority to radiologist performance. Moreover, the commercially available AI algorithm used in our study automatically learn from data and so we expect a progressive performance improvement. AI could be considered as a promising tool to rule-out fractures (especially when used as a “second reader”) and to prioritize positive cases, especially in increasing workload scenarios (ED, nightshifts) but further research is needed to evaluate the real impact on the clinical practice.

Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call