Abstract

Artificial intelligence (AI) has become a progressively prevalent Research Topic in medicine and is increasingly being applied to dermatology. There is a need to understand this technology's progress to help guide and shape the future for medical care providers and recipients. We reviewed the literature to evaluate the types of publications on the subject, the specific dermatological topics addressed by AI, and the most challenging barriers to its implementation. A substantial number of original articles and commentaries have been published to date and only few detailed reviews exist. Most AI applications focus on differentiating between benign and malignant skin lesions, however; others exist pertaining to ulcers, inflammatory skin diseases, allergen exposure, dermatopathology, and gene expression profiling. Applications commonly analyze and classify images, however, other tools such as risk assessment calculators are becoming increasingly available. Although many applications are technologically feasible, important implementation barriers have been identified including systematic biases, difficulty of standardization, interpretability, and acceptance by physicians and patients alike. This review provides insight into future research needs and possibilities. There is a strong need for clinical investigation in dermatology providing evidence of success overcoming the identified barriers. With these research goals in mind, an appropriate role for AI in dermatology may be achieved in not so distant future.

Highlights

  • Dermatology is a field with the growing interplay of digitalization, telehealth, and informatics [1]

  • We summarize the status of the literature on artificial intelligence (AI) in dermatology using three sections

  • We focus on dermatologic diseases targeted by AI, and we spotlight the identified barriers impeding AI implementation

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Summary

Frontiers in Medicine

Artificial intelligence (AI) has become a progressively prevalent Research Topic in medicine and is increasingly being applied to dermatology. There is a need to understand this technology’s progress to help guide and shape the future for medical care providers and recipients. We reviewed the literature to evaluate the types of publications on the subject, the specific dermatological topics addressed by AI, and the most challenging barriers to its implementation. Many applications are technologically feasible, important implementation barriers have been identified including systematic biases, difficulty of standardization, interpretability, and acceptance by physicians and patients alike. This review provides insight into future research needs and possibilities. There is a strong need for clinical investigation in dermatology providing evidence of success overcoming the identified barriers.

INTRODUCTION
Original Research
Keratinocyte Carcinomas and Melanoma
Ulcer Assessment
Psoriasis and Other Inflammatory Skin Diseases
Predicting Skin Sensitization Substances
Novel Applications in Pathology and Gene Expression Profiling
Choice of Predictive Model
Data Requirements
Next Steps
Findings
CONCLUSION
Full Text
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