Abstract

BackgroundThe autonomous artificial intelligence (AI) system for bone age rating (BoneXpert) was designed to be used in clinical radiology practice as an AI-replace tool, replacing the radiologist completely.ObjectiveThe aim of this study was to investigate how the tool is used in clinical practice. Are radiologists more inclined to use BoneXpert to assist rather than replace themselves, and how much time is saved?Materials and methodsWe sent a survey consisting of eight multiple-choice questions to 282 radiologists in departments in Europe already using the software.ResultsThe 97 (34%) respondents came from 18 countries. Their answers revealed that before installing the automated method, 83 (86%) of the respondents took more than 2 min per bone age rating; this fell to 20 (21%) respondents after installation. Only 17/97 (18%) respondents used BoneXpert to completely replace the radiologist; the rest used it to assist radiologists to varying degrees. For instance, 39/97 (40%) never overruled the automated reading, while 9/97 (9%) overruled more than 5% of the automated ratings. The majority 58/97 (60%) of respondents checked the radiographs themselves to exclude features of underlying disease.ConclusionBoneXpert significantly reduces reporting times for bone age determination. However, radiographic analysis involves more than just determining bone age. It also involves identification of abnormalities, and for this reason, radiologists cannot be completely replaced. AI systems originally developed to replace the radiologist might be more suitable as AI assist tools, particularly if they have not been validated to work autonomously, including the ability to omit ratings when the image is outside the range of validity.

Highlights

  • In this article, we define artificial intelligence (AI) as software that automates a cognitive task

  • There are intense discussions about how AI might affect the future of radiology, raising questions as to whether young doctors will be less inclined to train as radiologists and whether AI is dangerous, for example [3]

  • In this paper we investigated the adoption of AI in radiology, using the example of bone age assessment

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Summary

Introduction

We define artificial intelligence (AI) as software that automates a cognitive task. The autonomous artificial intelligence (AI) system for bone age rating (BoneXpert) was designed to be used in clinical radiology practice as an AI-replace tool, replacing the radiologist completely. Results The 97 (34%) respondents came from 18 countries Their answers revealed that before installing the automated method, 83 (86%) of the respondents took more than 2 min per bone age rating; this fell to 20 (21%) respondents after installation. Radiographic analysis involves more than just determining bone age It involves identification of abnormalities, and for this reason, radiologists cannot be completely replaced. AI systems originally developed to replace the radiologist might be more suitable as AI assist tools, if they have not been validated to work autonomously, including the ability to omit ratings when the image is outside the range of validity

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