City
Epaper

AI at par with specialists in diagnosing prostate cancer: Study

By IANS | Updated: January 20, 2022 20:50 IST

Wellington, Jan 20 Artificial intelligence (AI) systems can diagnose prostate cancer biopsies with the same level of accuracy ...

Open in App

Wellington, Jan 20 Artificial intelligence (AI) systems can diagnose prostate cancer biopsies with the same level of accuracy as specialist uropathologists, and better than many general pathologists, a new research has found.

In the study published in the science journal Nature Medicine, the performance of different AI models was tested against the gold standard diagnosis of prostate cancer.

The researchers organised a global competition to build AI models to diagnose more than 10,000 prostate biopsies.

Over 1,000 AI developers from 65 countries participated in the competition, sending in 1,010 algorithms to be assessed for accuracy in diagnosis, making it the largest competition to be held into the use of AI in pathology.

Fifteen of the algorithms were selected to have their performance measured against diagnoses made by specialist uropathologists and general pathologists.

The research provides the first independent evaluation of AI algorithms across different patient populations and pathology labs and across reference standards developed by expert panels of uropathologists from the US and Europe, said pathologist professor Brett Delahunt from the Department of Pathology and Molecular Medicine at the University of Otago, Wellington.

Prostate cancer is the second most commonly occurring cancer in men and the fourth most commonly occurring cancer overall. In 2020, it accounted for more than 14 lakh cases and over 3 lakh deaths globally.

Delahunt said achieving more precise diagnoses is key to reducing the number of deaths.

"Assessment of biopsies is crucial when it comes to making decisions on prostate cancer treatment - but there can be significant variations in the assessments made by different pathologists.

"Standardised AI models could really make a difference when it comes to improving outcomes for this disease," he noted.

Pathologists characterise tumours into different ‘Gleason' growth patterns, with biopsy specimens categorised into one of five International Society of Urological Pathology grade groups.

But the process is quite subjective and can lead to both ‘undergrading' and ‘overgrading' of prostate cancer biopsies, Delahunt said.

On the other hand, because the algorithms would likely miss fewer cancers than the pathologists did, AI could be used to reduce the workload of pathologists by automating the identification and exclusion of most benign biopsies, he noted.

Disclaimer: This post has been auto-published from an agency feed without any modifications to the text and has not been reviewed by an editor

Tags: WellingtonusNature MedicineDepartment of pathology and molecular medicineBrett delahunt
Open in App

Related Stories

InternationalIndian-Origin Man Beheaded In US In Front Of Family After Violent Dispute

BusinessAnil Ambani’s Reliance Power and Reliance Infra Shares Zoom Even as Indian Markets Tumble Amid US Tariffs

InternationalMissouri House Blast: 5 Injured After Huge Explosion Damages 20 Homes in St Louis County

InternationalHurricane Erin Enters Into Category 2 Storm With Maximum Winds of 100 mph, Heavy Rainfall Over Caribbean Islands Likely

InternationalIowa Shooting: Two Killed, One Injured In Firing and Blast in Glenwood; Suspect Arrested

Health Realted Stories

HealthHimachal's heritage & economy to get boost from GST reforms

HealthUS government shuts down in political standoff with dim prospects of early deal 

HealthDelhi HC quashes FIR against man accused of assaulting doctor, orders community service at same hospital

HealthCentre launches adoption awareness campaign for children with special needs

HealthDPIIT, Thermo Fisher Scientific tie up to boost India’s biotech startup ecosystem