Multi-center validation of an artificial intelligence system for detection of COVID-19 on chest radiographs in symptomatic patients
Academic Article
Publication Date:
2023
Short description:
Multi-center validation of an artificial intelligence system for detection of COVID-19 on chest radiographs in symptomatic patients / Kuo, M.D., Chiu, K.W.H., Wang, D.S., Larici, A.R., Poplavskiy, D., Valentini, A., Napoli, A., Borghesi, A., Ligabue, G., Fang, X.H.B., Wong, H.K.C., Zhang, S., Hunter, J.R., Mousa, A., Infante, A., Elia, L., Golemi, S., Yu, L.H.P., Hui, C.K.M., Erickson, B.J.. - In: EUROPEAN RADIOLOGY. - ISSN 1563-4086. - 33:1(2023), pp. 23-33. [10.1007/s00330-022-08969-z]
abstract:
Objectives While chest radiograph (CXR) is the first-line imaging investigation in patients with respiratory symptoms, differentiating COVID-19 from other respiratory infections on CXR remains challenging. We developed and validated an AI system for COVID-19 detection on presenting CXR. Methods A deep learning model (RadGenX), trained on 168,850 CXRs, was validated on a large international test set of presenting CXRs of symptomatic patients from 9 study sites (US, Italy, and Hong Kong SAR) and 2 public datasets from the US and Europe. Performance was measured by area under the receiver operator characteristic curve (AUC). Bootstrapped simulations were performed to assess performance across a range of potential COVID-19 disease prevalence values (3.33 to 33.3%). Comparison against international radiologists was performed on an independent test set of 852 cases. Results RadGenX achieved an AUC of 0.89 on 4-fold cross-validation and an AUC of 0.79 (95%CI 0.78-0.80) on an independent test cohort of 5,894 patients. Delong's test showed statistical differences in model performance across patients from different regions (p < 0.01), disease severity (p < 0.001), gender (p < 0.001), and age (p = 0.03). Prevalence simulations showed the negative predictive value increases from 86.1% at 33.3% prevalence, to greater than 98.5% at any prevalence below 4.5%. Compared with radiologists, McNemar's test showed the model has higher sensitivity (p < 0.001) but lower specificity (p < 0.001). Conclusion An AI model that predicts COVID-19 infection on CXR in symptomatic patients was validated on a large international cohort providing valuable context on testing and performance expectations for AI systems that perform COVID-19 prediction on CXR.
Iris type:
Articolo su rivista
Keywords:
Artificial intelligence; COVID-19; Public health; Radiology; Thoracic
List of contributors:
Kuo, Michael D; Chiu, Keith W H; Wang, David S; Larici, Anna Rita; Poplavskiy, Dmytro; Valentini, Adele; Napoli, Alessandro; Borghesi, Andrea; Ligabue, Guido; Fang, Xin Hao B; Wong, Hing Ki C; Zhang, Sailong; Hunter, John R; Mousa, Abeer; Infante, Amato; Elia, Lorenzo; Golemi, Salvatore; Yu, Leung Ho P; Hui, Christopher K M; Erickson, Bradley J
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