PRESS-NEWS.org - Press Release Distribution
PRESS RELEASES DISTRIBUTION

Keeping a human in the loop: Managing the ethics of AI in medicine

2023-10-20
(Press-News.org) Artificial intelligence (AI)—of ChatGPT fame—is increasingly used in medicine to improve diagnosis and treatment of diseases, and to avoid unnecessary screening for patients. But AI medical devices could also harm patients and worsen health inequities if they are not designed, tested, and used with care, according to an international task force that included a University of Rochester Medical Center bioethicist.

Jonathan Herington, PhD, was a member of the AI Task Force of the Society for Nuclear Medicine and Medical Imaging, which laid out recommendations on how to ethically develop and use AI medical devices in two papers published in the Journal of Nuclear Medicine. In short, the task force called for increased transparency about the accuracy and limits of AI and outlined ways to ensure all people have access to AI medical devices that work for them—regardless of their race, ethnicity, gender, or wealth.  

While the burden of proper design and testing falls to AI developers, health care providers are ultimately responsible for properly using AI and shouldn’t rely too heavily on AI predictions when making patient care decisions.

“There should always be a human in the loop,” said Herington, who is assistant professor of Health Humanities and Bioethics at URMC and was one of three bioethicists added to the task force in 2021. “Clinicians should use AI as an input into their own decision making, rather than replacing their decision making.”

This requires that doctors truly understand how a given AI medical device is intended to be used, how well it performs at that task, and any limitations—and they must pass that knowledge on to their patients. Doctors must weigh the relative risks of false positives versus false negatives for a given situation, all while taking structural inequities into account.

When using an AI system to identify probable tumors in PET scans, for example, health care providers must know how well the system performs at identifying this specific type of tumor in patients of the same sex, race, ethnicity, etc., as the patient in question.

“What that means for the developers of these systems is that they need to be very transparent,” said Herington.

According to the task force, it’s up to the AI developers to make accurate information about their medical device’s intended use, clinical performance, and limitations readily available to users. One way they recommend doing that is to build alerts right into the device or system that informs users about the degree of uncertainty of the AI’s predictions. That might look like heat maps on cancer scans that show whether areas are more or less likely to be cancerous.

To minimize that uncertainty, developers must carefully define the data they use to train and test their AI models, and should use clinically relevant criteria to evaluate the model’s performance. It’s not enough to simply validate algorithms used by a device or system. AI medical devices should be tested in so-called “silent trials”, meaning their performance would be evaluated by researchers on real patients in real time, but their predictions would not be available to the health care provider or applied to clinical decision making.

Developers should also design AI models to be useful and accurate in all contexts in which they will be deployed.

“A concern is that these high-tech, expensive systems would be deployed in really high-resource hospitals, and improve outcomes for relatively well-advantaged patients, while patients in under-resourced or rural hospitals wouldn't have access to them—or would have access to systems that make their care worse because they weren’t designed for them,” said Herington.

Currently, AI medical devices are being trained on datasets in which Latino and Black patients are underrepresented, meaning the devices are less likely to make accurate predictions for patients from these groups. In order to avoid deepening health inequities, developers must ensure their AI models are calibrated for all racial and gender groups by training them with datasets that represent all of the populations the medical device or system will ultimately serve.

Though these recommendations were developed with a focus on nuclear medicine and medical imaging, Herington believes they can and should be applied to AI medical devices broadly.

“The systems are becoming ever more powerful all the time and the landscape is shifting really quickly,” said Herington. “We have a rapidly closing window to solidify our ethical and regulatory framework around these things.”

END


ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:

High pregnancy weight gain tied to higher risk of death in the following decades

2023-10-20
Pregnant people who gained more than the now-recommended amount of weight had a higher risk of death from heart disease or diabetes in the decades that followed, according to new analysis of 50 years of data published in The Lancet and led by researchers from the Perelman School of Medicine at the University of Pennsylvania. The group studied a large national data set that stretched from when a person gave birth through the next five decades, assessing mortality rates to show the potential long-term effects of weight gain in pregnancy. Higher risk of death was found for all weight groups studied — including those defined ...

First-of-its kind hormone replacement treatment shows promise in patient trials

2023-10-20
A first-of-its kind hormone replacement therapy that more closely replicates the natural circadian and ultradian rhythms of our hormones has shown to improve symptoms in patients with adrenal conditions. Results from the University of Bristol-led clinical trial are published today [20 October] in the Journal of Internal Medicine. Low levels of a key hormone called ‘cortisol’ is typically a result of conditions such as Addison's and Congenital Adrenal Hyperplasia. The hormone regulates a range of vital processes, ...

For relationship maintenance, accurate perception of partner’s behavior is key

2023-10-19
URBANA, Ill. – Married couples and long-term romantic partners typically engage in a variety of behaviors that sustain and nourish the relationship. These actions promote higher levels of commitment, which benefits couples’ physical and psychological health. A new study from the University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign looks at how such relationship maintenance behaviors interact with satisfaction and commitment. “Relationship maintenance is a well-established measure of couple behavior. In our study, we measured it with five main categories, ...

NASA's Webb discovers new feature in Jupiter’s atmosphere

NASAs Webb discovers new feature in Jupiter’s atmosphere
2023-10-19
NASA’s James Webb Space Telescope has discovered a new, never-before-seen feature in Jupiter’s atmosphere. The high-speed jet stream, which spans more than 3,000 miles (4,800 kilometers) wide, sits over Jupiter’s equator above the main cloud decks. The discovery of this jet is giving insights into how the layers of Jupiter’s famously turbulent atmosphere interact with each other, and how Webb is uniquely capable of tracking those features. “This is something that totally surprised us,” said Ricardo Hueso of the University of the Basque Country in Bilbao, Spain, lead author on the paper ...

MD Anderson research highlights: ESMO 2023 special edition

2023-10-19
ABSTRACTS: LBA71, 1088MO, 95MO, LBA48, 1082O, 1085O, LBA34, 243MO MADRID ― The University of Texas MD Anderson Cancer Center’s Research Highlights provides a glimpse into recent basic, translational and clinical cancer research from MD Anderson experts. This special edition features upcoming oral presentations by MD Anderson researchers at the 2023 European Society for Medical Oncology (ESMO) Congress focused on clinical advances across a variety of cancer types. Highlights include a combination strategy for EGFR-mutant metastatic lung cancer, updated results for a Phase ...

To excel at engineering design, generative AI must learn to innovate, study finds

To excel at engineering design, generative AI must learn to innovate, study finds
2023-10-19
ChatGPT and other deep generative models are proving to be uncanny mimics. These AI supermodels can churn out poems, finish symphonies, and create new videos and images by automatically learning from millions of examples of previous works. These enormously powerful and versatile tools excel at generating new content that resembles everything they’ve seen before.  But as MIT engineers say in a new study, similarity isn’t enough if you want to truly innovate in engineering tasks.  “Deep generative models (DGMs) are ...

Startup workers flee for bigger, more established companies during pandemic

Startup workers flee for bigger, more established companies during pandemic
2023-10-19
October 19, 2023 Startup workers flee for bigger, more established companies during pandemic Findings reveal vulnerability of early-stage firms in downturns Toronto - The world may have felt like it had stopped in the pandemic’s first weeks. But a “flight to safety” was underway at a popular digital job platform catering to the startup sector. Digging into the data for nearly 180,000 users from AngelList Talent (now called Wellfound), the biggest online recruitment platform for private and entrepreneurial companies, researchers have found that U.S. job hunters turned away from smaller, early-stage companies in favour of positions at bigger, more established firms. Just ...

Research repository arXiv receives $10M for upgrades

2023-10-19
ITHACA, N.Y. -- Cornell Tech has announced a total of more than $10 million in gifts and grants from the Simons Foundation and the National Science Foundation, respectively, to support arXiv, a free distribution service and open-access archive for scholarly articles. The funding will allow the growing repository with more than 2 million articles to migrate to the cloud and modernize its code to ensure reliability, fault tolerance and accessibility for researchers. “I am deeply grateful for this tremendous support from both the Simons Foundation ...

Electrons are quick-change artists in molten salts, chemists show

Electrons are quick-change artists in molten salts, chemists show
2023-10-19
In a finding that helps elucidate how molten salts in advanced nuclear reactors might behave, scientists have shown how electrons interacting with the ions of the molten salt can form three states with different properties. Understanding these states can help predict the impact of radiation on the performance of salt-fueled reactors. The researchers, from the Department of Energy’s Oak Ridge National Laboratory and the University of Iowa, computationally simulated the introduction of an excess electron into molten zinc chloride salt to see what would happen. They found three possible scenarios. In one, the electron becomes part of a molecular radical that ...

Communities of color experienced fear and mistrust of institutions during COVID-19 pandemic

Communities of color experienced fear and mistrust of institutions during COVID-19 pandemic
2023-10-19
RIVERSIDE, Calif. -- A study led by researchers in the School of Medicine at the University of California, Riverside, has found that in communities of color in Inland Southern California, historical, cultural, and social traumas induce fear and mistrust in public health and medical, scientific, and governmental institutions, which, in turn, influence these communities’ hesitation to get tested and vaccinated for COVID-19.  The study, published in Culture, Medicine, and Psychiatry, underscores the need for community-based health interventions that consider structural and social determinants of health ...

LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:

Duke-NUS launches new pictograms to clarify medication instructions, enhancing patient care

Chiral nanocomposite for highly selective dual-mode sensing and bioimaging of hydrogen sulfide

UCLA researchers develop new risk scoring system to account for role of chronic illness in post-surgery mortality

Mount Sinai BioDesign expands industry collaborations to expedite and enhance the development of innovative surgical technologies

Study reveals limits of using land surface temperature to explain heat hazards in Miami-Dade County

The Lancet Public Health: Accelerating actions to eliminate tobacco smoking could help increase life expectancy and prevent millions of premature deaths by 2050, modelling study suggests

The Lancet Public Health: Banning tobacco sales among young people could prevent 1.2 million lung cancer deaths, global modelling study suggests

One million people who never regularly smoked now vape in England

Methane emissions from dairy farms higher than thought - but conversion could reduce emissions

Early foster care gave poor women power, 17th-century records reveal

Unpacking polar sea ice

U of M Medical School receives $3.2M to study drivers of chronic low back pain

UT Health San Antonio School of Nursing’s Caring for the Caregiver program earns national award

People infer the past better than the future, study finds

Sexual and gender minorities more likely to experience life dissatisfaction, isolation, stress

In surgery for localized muscle-invasive bladder cancer, extended lymph node removal offers no survival benefit but does increase morbidity

“Nature-First Cities”, a new book explores how to invite nature back home, without evicting people

Health care site- and patient-related factors influencing COVID-19 vaccination completion rates

SwRI-built solar wind plasma sensor to help track space weather

Filament structure activates and regulates CRISPR-Cas ‘protein scissors’

Environmental quality of life benefits women worldwide

Satisfying friendships could be key for young, single adults’ happiness

Wild banana relatives of mainland Southeast Asia reveal hidden diversity and the urgent need to preserve nature’s genetic resources for future crops

A century of data uncovers how chestnut blight has devastated the American chestnut - and how forest composition has evolved since - in Shenanoah National Park, Virginia

Migration in adolescence may double the risk of psychosis in later life

Iron nuggets in the Pinnacles unlock secrets of ancient and future climates

Severe climate change may increase violence against women

Higher-order interactions can remodel the landscape of complex systems

New cardiovascular disease risk marker discovered in older women

Storms, floods, landslides associated with intimate partner violence against women two years later

[Press-News.org] Keeping a human in the loop: Managing the ethics of AI in medicine