The AI‐augmented clinician: Are we ready? DOI Open Access
Bernard Dan

Developmental Medicine & Child Neurology, Journal Year: 2025, Volume and Issue: unknown

Published: Feb. 22, 2025

Language: Английский

The TRIPOD-LLM reporting guideline for studies using large language models DOI Creative Commons
Jack Gallifant,

Majid Afshar,

Saleem Ameen

et al.

Nature Medicine, Journal Year: 2025, Volume and Issue: unknown

Published: Jan. 8, 2025

Language: Английский

Citations

13

GPT-4 assistance for improvement of physician performance on patient care tasks: a randomized controlled trial DOI
Ethan Goh, Robert J. Gallo, Eric Strong

et al.

Nature Medicine, Journal Year: 2025, Volume and Issue: unknown

Published: Feb. 5, 2025

Language: Английский

Citations

6

Artificial intelligence in clinical genetics DOI Creative Commons
Dat Duong, Benjamin D. Solomon

European Journal of Human Genetics, Journal Year: 2025, Volume and Issue: unknown

Published: Jan. 13, 2025

Abstract Artificial intelligence (AI) has been growing more powerful and accessible, will increasingly impact many areas, including virtually all aspects of medicine biomedical research. This review focuses on previous, current, especially emerging applications AI in clinical genetics. Topics covered include a brief explanation different general categories AI, machine learning, deep generative AI. After introductory explanations examples, the discusses genetics three main categories: diagnostics; management therapeutics; support. The concludes with short, medium, long-term predictions about ways that may affect field Overall, while precise speed at which continue to change is unclear, as are overall ramifications for patients, families, clinicians, researchers, others, it likely result dramatic evolution It be important those involved prepare accordingly order minimize risks maximize benefits related use field.

Language: Английский

Citations

3

AI for medical diagnosis: does a single negative trial mean it is ineffective? DOI Creative Commons
Olga Kostopoulou, Brendan Delaney

The Lancet Digital Health, Journal Year: 2025, Volume and Issue: 7(2), P. e108 - e109

Published: Jan. 29, 2025

Language: Английский

Citations

2

Artificial intelligence for medicine 2025: Navigating the endless frontier DOI
Jiyan Dai, Huiyu Xu, Tao Chen

et al.

The Innovation Medicine, Journal Year: 2025, Volume and Issue: unknown, P. 100120 - 100120

Published: Jan. 1, 2025

<p>Artificial intelligence (AI) is driving transformative changes in the field of medicine, with its successful application relying on accurate data and rigorous quality standards. By integrating clinical information, pathology, medical imaging, physiological signals, omics data, AI significantly enhances precision research into disease mechanisms patient prognoses. technologies also demonstrate exceptional potential drug development, surgical automation, brain-computer interface (BCI) research. Through simulation biological systems prediction intervention outcomes, enables researchers to rapidly translate innovations practical applications. While challenges such as computational demands, software ethical considerations persist, future remains highly promising. plays a pivotal role addressing societal issues like low birth rates aging populations. can contribute mitigating rate through enhanced ovarian reserve evaluation, menopause forecasting, optimization Assisted Reproductive Technologies (ART), sperm analysis selection, endometrial receptivity fertility remote consultations. In posed by an population, facilitate development dementia models, cognitive health monitoring strategies, early screening systems, AI-driven telemedicine platforms, intelligent smart companion robots, environments for aging-in-place. profoundly shapes medicine.</p>

Language: Английский

Citations

2

Artificial Intelligence in Physical Therapy: Evaluating ChatGPT's Role in Clinical Decision Support for Musculoskeletal Care DOI
Jie Hao, Zixuan Yao,

Yaogeng Tang

et al.

Annals of Biomedical Engineering, Journal Year: 2025, Volume and Issue: unknown

Published: Jan. 6, 2025

Language: Английский

Citations

1

Artificial intelligence in rheumatology research: what is it good for? DOI Creative Commons
José Miguel Sequí-Sabater, Diego Benavent

RMD Open, Journal Year: 2025, Volume and Issue: 11(1), P. e004309 - e004309

Published: Jan. 1, 2025

Artificial intelligence (AI) is transforming rheumatology research, with a myriad of studies aiming to improve diagnosis, prognosis and treatment prediction, while also showing potential capability optimise the research workflow, drug discovery clinical trials. Machine learning, key element discriminative AI, has demonstrated ability accurately classifying rheumatic diseases predicting therapeutic outcomes by using diverse data types, including structured databases, imaging text. In parallel, generative driven large language models, becoming powerful tool for optimising workflow supporting content generation, literature review automation decision support. This explores current applications future both AI in rheumatology. It highlights challenges posed these technologies, such as ethical concerns need rigorous validation regulatory oversight. The integration promises substantial advancements but requires balanced approach benefits minimise possible downsides.

Language: Английский

Citations

1

Multiple large language models versus experienced physicians in diagnosing challenging cases with gastrointestinal symptoms DOI Creative Commons
Xintian Yang, Tongxin Li, Handong Wang

et al.

npj Digital Medicine, Journal Year: 2025, Volume and Issue: 8(1)

Published: Feb. 5, 2025

Abstract Faced with challenging cases, doctors are increasingly seeking diagnostic advice from large language models (LLMs). This study aims to compare the ability of LLMs and human physicians diagnose cases. An offline dataset 67 cases primary gastrointestinal symptoms was used solicit possible diagnoses seven 22 gastroenterologists. The by Claude 3.5 Sonnet covered highest proportion (95% confidence interval [CI]) instructive (76.1%, [70.6%–80.9%]), significantly surpassing all gastroenterologists ( p < 0.05 for all). achieved a higher coverage rate CI) than that using search engines or other traditional resource (76.1% [70.6%–80.9%] vs. 45.5% [40.7%-50.4%], 0.001). highlights advanced may assist instructive, time-saving, cost-effective scopes in

Language: Английский

Citations

1

New FDA Policies Could Limit the Full Value of AI in Medicine DOI Creative Commons
Scott Gottlieb

JAMA Health Forum, Journal Year: 2025, Volume and Issue: 6(2), P. e250289 - e250289

Published: Feb. 6, 2025

This JAMA Forum discusses the ways in which recent changes to US Food and Drug Administration (FDA) policies related regulation of artificial intelligence (AI) have added new uncertainties for use AI tools medicine.

Language: Английский

Citations

1

Crucial Role of Understanding in Human-Artificial Intelligence Interaction for Successful Clinical Adoption DOI
Seong Ho Park, Curtis P. Langlotz

Korean Journal of Radiology, Journal Year: 2025, Volume and Issue: 26

Published: Jan. 1, 2025

Language: Английский

Citations

1