| Literature DB >> 31304320 |
Michael D Abràmoff1,2,3,4, Philip T Lavin5, Michele Birch6, Nilay Shah7, James C Folk1,2,3.
Abstract
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.Entities:
Keywords: Biomedical engineering; Eye manifestations
Year: 2018 PMID: 31304320 PMCID: PMC6550188 DOI: 10.1038/s41746-018-0040-6
Source DB: PubMed Journal: NPJ Digit Med ISSN: 2398-6352
Fig. 1Waterfall diagram showing the final disposition of each participant in the enrolled, intention to screen (ITS), and fully analyzable populations
Demographic characteristics of the analyzable (n = 819) and non-analyzable (n = 73) ITS subsets
| Category | Subgroup | Analyzable % ( | Not analyzable % ( |
|---|---|---|---|
| Age (years) | <65 | 69.1% (566/819) | 52.1% (38/73) |
| ≥65 | 30.9% (253/819) | 47.9% (35/73) | |
| Ethnicity | Hispanic or Latino | 16.4% (134/819) | 13.7% (10/73) |
| Not Hispanic or Latino | 83.0% (680/819) | 80.8% (59/73) | |
| Unknown | 0.6% (5/819) | 5.5% (4/73) | |
| HbA1c7 | <7 | 11.6% (95/819) | 23.3% (17/73) |
| ≥7 | 86.7% (710/819) | 76.7% (56/73) | |
| Unknown* | 1.7% (14/819) | 0% (0/73) | |
| HbA1c9 | <9 | 46.4% (380/819) | 54.8% (40/73) |
| ≥9 | 51.9% (425/819) | 45.2% (33/73) | |
| Unknown* | 1.7% (14/819) | 0% (0/73) | |
| Lens Status | Phakic with opacities or Cannot Grade | 10.4% (85/819) | 47.9% (35/73) |
| Pseudophakic or no opacities | 89.6% (734/819) | 52.1% (38/73) | |
| Race | American Indian or Alaskan Native | 0.4% (3/819) | 0.0% (0/73) |
| Asian | 1.5% (12/819) | 4.1% (3/73) | |
| Black | 28.2% (231/819) | 46.6% (34/73) | |
| Mixed Race | 1.2% (10/819) | 1.4% (1/73) | |
| Other-Mexican | 0.1% (1/819) | 0.0% (0/73) | |
| Other-Puerto rican | 0.1% (1/819) | 0.0% (0/73) | |
| Refuse to provide | 1.1% (9/819) | 0.0% (0/73) | |
| Unknown | 3.5% (29/819) | 1.4% (1/73) | |
| White | 63.9% (523/819) | 46.6% (34/73) |
* These subjects had diabetes diagnosed by means other than HbA1C – see Methods
AI system diagnostic accuracy
| Point estimate | 95% CI | Superiority endpoint | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Sensitivity | 87.2% | 81.8%–91.2% | 85.0% |
| Specificity | 90.7% | 88.3%–92.7% | 82.5% |
Point estimates for sensitivity and specificity were calculated on the 819 participants that were analyzable, using the prespecified logistic regression. The superiority endpoints were previously discussed with FDA.
Study exclusion criteria
| unable to understand the study |
| unable to or unwilling to sign the informed consent |
| indicate persistent vision loss, blurred vision, or floaters |
| previously diagnosed with macular edema, severe non-proliferative retinopathy, proliferative retinopathy, radiation retinopathy, or retinal vein occlusion |
| history of laser treatment of the retina or injections into either eye, or any history of retinal surgery; |
| currently participating in another investigational eye study or actively receiving investigational product for DR or DME |
| a condition that, in the opinion of the investigator, would preclude participation in the study; |
| contraindicated for imaging by fundus imaging systems used in the study because of hypersensitivity to light, recently underwent photodynamic therapy, or was taking medication that causes photosensitivity |