Abstract
Background Natural language processing (NLP) is commonly used to annotate radiology datasets for training deep learning (DL) models. However, the accuracy and potential biases of these NLP methods have not been thoroughly investigated, particularly across different demographic groups. Purpose To evaluate the accuracy and demographic bias of four NLP radiology report labeling tools on two chest radiograph datasets. Materials and Methods This retrospective study, performed between April 2022 and April 2024, evaluated chest radiograph report labeling using four NLP tools (CheXpert [rule-based], RadReportAnnotator [RRA; DL-based], OpenAI's GPT-4 [DL-based], cTAKES [hybrid]) on a subset of the Medical Information Mart for Intensive Care (MIMIC) chest radiograph dataset balanced for representation of age, sex, and race and ethnicity (n = 692) and the entire Indiana University (IU) chest radiograph dataset (n = 3665). Three board-certified radiologists annotated the chest radiograph reports for 14 thoracic disease labels. NLP tool performance was evaluated using several metrics, including accuracy and error rate. Bias was evaluated by comparing performance between demographic subgroups using the Pearson χ2 test. Results The IU dataset included 3665 patients (mean age, 49.7 years ± 17 [SD]; 1963 female), while the MIMIC dataset included 692 patients (mean age, 54.1 years ± 23.1; 357 female). All four NLP tools demonstrated high accuracy across findings in the IU and MIMIC datasets, as follows: CheXpert (92.6% [47 516 of 51 310], 90.2% [8742 of 9688]), RRA (82.9% [19 746 of 23 829], 92.2% [2870 of 3114]), GPT-4 (94.3% [45 586 of 48 342], 91.6% [6721 of 7336]), and cTAKES (84.7% [43 436 of 51 310], 88.7% [8597 of 9688]). RRA and cTAKES had higher accuracy (P < .001) on the MIMIC dataset, while CheXpert and GPT-4 had higher accuracy on the IU dataset. Differences (P < .001) in error rates were observed across age groups for all NLP tools except RRA on the MIMIC dataset, with the highest error rates for CheXpert, RRA, and cTAKES in patients older than 80 years (mean, 15.8% ± 5.0) and the highest error rate for GPT-4 in patients 60-80 years of age (8.3%). Conclusion Although commonly used NLP tools for chest radiograph report annotation are accurate when evaluating reports in aggregate, demographic subanalyses showed significant bias, with poorer performance in older patients. © RSNA, 2024 Supplemental material is available for this article. See also the editorial by Cai in this issue.
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