Requirements and reliability of AI in the medical context

Phys Med. 2021 Mar:83:72-78. doi: 10.1016/j.ejmp.2021.02.024. Epub 2021 Mar 13.

Abstract

The digital information age has been a catalyst in creating a renewed interest in Artificial Intelligence (AI) approaches, especially the subclass of computer algorithms that are popularly grouped into Machine Learning (ML). These methods have allowed one to go beyond limited human cognitive ability into understanding the complexity in the high dimensional data. Medical sciences have seen a steady use of these methods but have been slow in adoption to improve patient care. There are some significant impediments that have diluted this effort, which include availability of curated diverse data sets for model building, reliable human-level interpretation of these models, and reliable reproducibility of these methods for routine clinical use. Each of these aspects has several limiting conditions that need to be balanced out, considering the data/model building efforts, clinical implementation, integration cost to translational effort with minimal patient level harm, which may directly impact future clinical adoption. In this review paper, we will assess each aspect of the problem in the context of reliable use of the ML methods in oncology, as a representative study case, with the goal to safeguard utility and improve patient care in medicine in general.

Keywords: Artificial intelligence; Machine learning; Medical applications; Oncology; Reliability.

Publication types

  • Review

MeSH terms

  • Algorithms
  • Artificial Intelligence*
  • Humans
  • Machine Learning
  • Medicine*
  • Reproducibility of Results