Artificial Intelligence and Ophthalmic Clinical Registries.

Am J Ophthalmol

From the Faculty of Medicine and Health, Save Sight Institute, The University of Sydney, (L.T., H.K., D.S., C.H.C., S.L.W.) Sydney, New South Wales, Australia.

Published: December 2024


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Article Abstract

Purpose: The recent advances in artificial intelligence (AI) represent a promising solution to increasing clinical demand and ever limited health resources. Whilst powerful, AI models require vast amounts of representative training data to output meaningful predictions in the clinical environment. Clinical registries represent a promising source of large volume real-world data which could be used to train more accurate and widely applicable AI models. This review aims to provide an overview of the current applications of AI to ophthalmic clinical registry data.

Design And Methods: A systematic search of EMBASE, Medline, PubMed, Scopus and Web of Science for primary research articles that applied AI to ophthalmic clinical registry data was conducted in July 2024.

Results: Twenty-three primary research articles applying AI to ophthalmic clinic registries (n = 14) were found. Registries were primarily defined by the condition captured and the most common conditions where AI was applied were glaucoma (n = 3) and neovascular age-related macular degeneration (n = 3). Tabular clinical data was the most common form of input into AI algorithms and outputs were primarily classifiers (n = 8, 40%) and risk quantifier models (n = 7, 35%). The AI algorithms applied were almost exclusively supervised conventional machine learning models (n = 39, 85%) such as decision tree classifiers and logistic regression, with only 7 applications of deep learning or natural language processing algorithms. Significant heterogeneity was found with regards to model validation methodology and measures of performance.

Conclusions: Limited applications of deep learning algorithms to clinical registry data have been reported. The lack of standardized validation methodology and heterogeneity of performance outcome reporting suggests that the application of AI to clinical registries is still in its infancy constrained by the poor accessibility of registry data and reflecting the need for a standardization of methodology and greater involvement of domain experts in the future development of clinically deployable AI.

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http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.ajo.2024.07.039DOI Listing

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