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Objectives: Large language models (LLMs) are revolutionizing the natural language pro-cessing (NLP) landscape within healthcare, prompting the need to synthesize the latest ad-vancements and their diverse medical applications. We attempt to summarize the current state of research in this rapidly evolving space.
Methods: We conducted a review of the most recent studies on biomedical NLP facilitated by LLMs, sourcing literature from PubMed, the Association for Computational Linguistics Anthology, IEEE Explore, and Google Scholar (the latter particularly for preprints). Given the ongoing exponential growth in LLM-related publications, our survey was inherently selective. We attempted to abstract key findings in terms of (i) LLMs customized for medical texts, and (ii) the type of medical text being leveraged by LLMs, namely medical literature, electronic health records (EHRs), and social media. In addition to technical details, we touch upon topics such as privacy, bias, interpretability, and equitability.
Results: We observed that while general-purpose LLMs (e.g., GPT-4) are most popular, there is a growing trend in training or customizing open-source LLMs for specific biomedi-cal texts and tasks. Several promising open-source LLMs are currently available, and appli-cations involving EHRs and biomedical literature are more prominent relative to noisier data sources such as social media. For supervised classification and named entity recogni-tion tasks, traditional (encoder only) transformer-based models still outperform new-age LLMs, and the latter are typically suited for few-shot settings and generative tasks such as summarization. There is still a paucity of research on evaluation, bias, privacy, reproduci-bility, and equitability of LLMs.
Conclusions: LLMs have the potential to transform NLP tasks within the broader medical domain. While technical progress continues, biomedical application focused research must prioritize aspects not necessarily related to performance such as task-oriented evaluation, bias, and equitable use.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1055/s-0044-1800750 | DOI Listing |
Ren Fail
December 2025
Department of Nephrology, The Affiliated Hospital of Qingdao University, Qingdao, China.
Large language models (LLMs) represent a transformative advance in artificial intelligence, with growing potential to impact chronic kidney disease (CKD) management. CKD is a complex, highly prevalent condition requiring multifaceted care and substantial patient engagement. Recent developments in LLMs-including conversational AI, multimodal integration, and autonomous agents-offer novel opportunities to enhance patient education, streamline clinical documentation, and support decision-making across nephrology practice.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFAnat Sci Educ
September 2025
Department of Anatomy, Hamidiye Faculty of Medicine, University of Health Sciences, Istanbul, Turkey.
Educational materials advocating whole-body donation must be accurate, easy to read, and transparent, as one potential solution to the fact that the supply of donations is not keeping pace with educational demand, thereby disrupting anatomy education programs. The use of AI technologies to supplement communications with prospective donors and next of kin deserves investigation to determine whether LLM-based approaches meet the common requirements for effective communication. This study contributes to the limited literature on LLM-supported communications by presenting a comparative quantitative benchmark and an adaptable evaluation framework.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFRisk Anal
September 2025
Edward J. Bloustein School, Rutgers University, New Brunswick, New Jersey, USA.
This AI-assisted review article offers a dual review: a book review of Living with Risk in the Late Roman World by Cam Grey, and a critical review of the current potential of large language models (LLMs), specifically ChatGPT's DeepResearch mode, to assist in thoughtful and scholarly book reviewing within risk science. Grey's book presents an innovative reconstruction of how communities in the late Roman Empire perceived and adapted to chronic environmental and societal risks, emphasizing spatial variability, cultural interpretation, and the normalization of uncertainty. Drawing on commentary from a human reviewer and a parallel AI-assisted analysis, we compare the distinct strengths and limitations of each approach.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Dent
September 2025
Dental Clinic Post-Graduate Program, University Center of State of Pará, Belém, Pará, Brazil. Electronic address:
Objective: This study evaluated the coherence, consistency, and diagnostic accuracy of eight AI-based chatbots in clinical scenarios related to dental implants.
Methods: A double-blind, clinical experimental study was carried out between February and March 2025, to evaluate eight AI-based chatbots using six fictional cases simulating peri-implant mucositis and peri-implantitis. Each chatbot answered five standardized clinical questions across three independent runs per case, generating 720 binary outputs.
Am J Pharm Educ
September 2025
Department of Pharmacotherapy, University of Utah College of Pharmacy, 30 South 2000 East, Salt Lake City, Utah 84112. Electronic address:
The accelerating adoption of artificial intelligence (AI), particularly large language models (LLMs) such as ChatGPT, has raised critical questions about the role of pharmacists and the potential for AI to substitute for human expertise in pharmaceutical care. Grounded in Porter's Five Forces framework-specifically the threat of substitutes-this commentary explores whether AI can adequately fulfill the complex and relational functions of pharmacists in delivering care to patients. Drawing from foundational definitions of pharmaceutical care and economic theories of substitution, the paper examines both historical and emerging competitors to pharmacist-provided services, including physicians, nurses, and now AI-powered tools.
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