Abràmoff Michael D, Lavin Philip T, Birch Michele, Shah Nilay, Folk James C
1Department of Ophthalmology and Visual Sciences, University of Iowa, Iowa City, IA 52242 USA.
2Veterans Administration Medical Center, Iowa City, IA 52242 USA.
NPJ Digit Med. 2018 Aug 28;1:39. doi: 10.1038/s41746-018-0040-6. eCollection 2018.
Artificial Intelligence (AI) has long promised to increase healthcare affordability, quality and accessibility but FDA, until recently, had never authorized an autonomous AI diagnostic system. This pivotal trial of an AI system to detect diabetic retinopathy (DR) in people with diabetes enrolled 900 subjects, with no history of DR at primary care clinics, by comparing to Wisconsin Fundus Photograph Reading Center (FPRC) widefield stereoscopic photography and macular Optical Coherence Tomography (OCT), by FPRC certified photographers, and FPRC grading of Early Treatment Diabetic Retinopathy Study Severity Scale (ETDRS) and Diabetic Macular Edema (DME). More than mild DR (mtmDR) was defined as ETDRS level 35 or higher, and/or DME, in at least one eye. AI system operators underwent a standardized training protocol before study start. Median age was 59 years (range, 22-84 years); among participants, 47.5% of participants were male; 16.1% were Hispanic, 83.3% not Hispanic; 28.6% African American and 63.4% were not; 198 (23.8%) had mtmDR. The AI system exceeded all pre-specified superiority endpoints at sensitivity of 87.2% (95% CI, 81.8-91.2%) (>85%), specificity of 90.7% (95% CI, 88.3-92.7%) (>82.5%), and imageability rate of 96.1% (95% CI, 94.6-97.3%), demonstrating AI's ability to bring specialty-level diagnostics to primary care settings. Based on these results, FDA authorized the system for use by health care providers to detect more than mild DR and diabetic macular edema, making it, the first FDA authorized autonomous AI diagnostic system in any field of medicine, with the potential to help prevent vision loss in thousands of people with diabetes annually. ClinicalTrials.gov NCT02963441.
长期以来,人工智能一直承诺要提高医疗保健的可承受性、质量和可及性,但直到最近,美国食品药品监督管理局(FDA)从未批准过一个自主的人工智能诊断系统。这项人工智能系统检测糖尿病患者糖尿病视网膜病变(DR)的关键试验,纳入了900名在初级保健诊所无DR病史的受试者,由FPRC认证摄影师采用威斯康星眼底照片阅读中心(FPRC)的广角立体摄影和黄斑光学相干断层扫描(OCT)进行检查,并由FPRC对糖尿病视网膜病变早期治疗研究严重程度量表(ETDRS)和糖尿病性黄斑水肿(DME)进行分级。至少一只眼睛中,ETDRS水平为35或更高和/或患有DME被定义为中度以上DR(mtmDR)。在研究开始前,人工智能系统操作人员接受了标准化培训方案。中位年龄为59岁(范围22 - 84岁);参与者中,47.5%为男性;16.1%为西班牙裔,83.3%非西班牙裔;28.6%为非裔美国人,63.4%不是;198人(23.8%)患有mtmDR。人工智能系统在灵敏度87.2%(95%CI,81.8 - 91.2%)(>85%)、特异性90.7%(95%CI,88.3 - 92.7%)(>82.5%)和成像率96.1%(95%CI,94.6 - 97.3%)方面超过了所有预先设定的优越性终点,证明了人工智能将专科水平诊断引入初级保健环境的能力。基于这些结果,FDA批准该系统供医疗保健提供者用于检测中度以上DR和糖尿病性黄斑水肿,使其成为FDA在任何医学领域批准的首个自主人工智能诊断系统,有可能每年帮助数千名糖尿病患者预防视力丧失。ClinicalTrials.gov NCT02963441。