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

New AI transforms radiology with speed, accuracy never seen before

In a major clinical study, the tool boosted productivity by up to 40% without compromising accuracy

2025-06-05
(Press-News.org) CHICAGO --- A first-of-its-kind generative AI system, developed in-house at Northwestern Medicine, is revolutionizing radiology — boosting productivity, identifying life-threatening conditions in milliseconds and offering a breakthrough solution to the global radiologist shortage, a large new study finds.

The findings will be published on Thursday (June 5) in JAMA Network Open.

“This is, to my knowledge, the first use of AI that demonstrably improves productivity, especially in health care. Even in other fields, I haven’t seen anything close to a 40% boost,” said senior author Dr. Mozziyar Etemadi, an assistant professor of anesthesiology at Northwestern University Feinberg School of Medicine and of biomedical engineering at Northwestern’s McCormick School of Engineering.

For the study, the AI system was deployed in real-time across the 12-hospital Northwestern Medicine network, where nearly 24,000 radiology reports were analyzed over a five-month period in 2024. Etemadi’s team then compared radiograph report creation times and clinical accuracy with and without the AI tool.

The results: an average 15.5% boost in radiograph report completion efficiency — with some radiologists achieving gains as high as 40% — without compromising accuracy. Follow-on work, still unpublished, shows up to 80% efficiency gains and enables the tool for CT scans. The time saved allowed radiologists to return diagnoses much faster, particularly in critical cases in which every second counts.

According to the study authors, this is the first generative AI radiology tool in the world to be integrated into a clinical workflow. It also is the first time a generative AI model has demonstrated both high accuracy and increased efficiency across all types of X-rays, from skulls to toes.

‘It doubled our efficiency’

Unlike other narrow AI tools currently on the market that focus on detecting a single condition, Northwestern’s holistic model analyzes the entire X-ray or CT scan. It then automatically generates a report that is 95% complete and personalized to each patient, which the radiologist can choose to use, review and finalize. These reports summarize key findings and offer a template to augment the radiologists’ diagnosis and treatment.

“For me and my colleagues, it’s not an exaggeration to say that it doubled our efficiency. It’s such a tremendous advantage and force multiplier,” said co-author Dr. Samir Abboud, chief of emergency radiology at Northwestern Medicine and clinical assistant professor of radiology at Feinberg.  

Flagging life-threatening conditions

In addition to improving efficiency, the AI system flags life-threatening conditions like pneumothorax (collapsed lung) in real time — before a radiologist even looks at the X-rays. As the AI model drafts reports for every image, an automated tool monitors those reports for critical findings and cross-checks them with patient records. If the system identifies a new condition that needs urgent intervention, it could immediately alert radiologists.

“On any given day in the ER, we might have 100 images to review, and we don’t know which one holds a diagnosis that could save a life,” Abboud said. “This technology helps us triage faster — so we catch the most urgent cases sooner and get patients to treatment quicker.”

The Northwestern team also is adapting the AI model to detect potentially missed or delayed diagnoses, such as early-stage lung cancer.

‘No need to rely on tech giants’

Rather than adapting large, internet-trained models like ChatGPT, the Northwestern engineers built their own system from scratch using clinical data from within the Northwestern Medicine network. That allowed the team to create a lightweight, nimble AI model designed specifically for radiology at Northwestern — faster, more accurate and requiring far less computing power.

“There is no need for health systems to rely on tech giants,” said first author Dr. Jonathan Huang, a third-year medical student at Feinberg who holds a Ph.D. in biomedical engineering from McCormick.

“Our study shows that building custom AI models is well within reach of a typical health system, without reliance on expensive and opaque third-party tools like ChatGPT. We believe that this democratization of access to AI is the key to drive adoption worldwide,” Etemadi added.

Solving a global shortage

Radiology is becoming one of health care’s biggest bottlenecks. By 2033, the U.S. is expected to experience a shortage of up to 42,000 radiologists, as imaging volumes rise by up to 5% annually while radiology residency positions increase by just 2%.

Northwestern’s AI system offers a solution, helping radiologists clear backlogs and deliver results in hours instead of days. And while the technology is powerful, it won’t replace humans.

“You still need a radiologist as the gold standard,” Abboud said. “Medicine changes constantly — new drugs, new devices, new diagnoses — and we have to make sure the AI keeps up. Our role becomes ensuring every interpretation is right for the patient.”

Two patents have been approved for the Northwestern Medicine technology and others are in various stages of the approval process. The tool is in the early stages of commercialization.

The study is titled “Efficiency and Quality of Generative AI–Assisted Radiograph Reporting”

END


ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:

Brain mechanisms that distinguish imagination from reality discovered

2025-06-05
Areas of the brain that help a person differentiate between what is real and what is imaginary have been uncovered in a new study led by UCL researchers. The research, published in Neuron, found that a region in the brain known as the fusiform gyrus – located behind one’s temples, on the underside of the brain’s temporal lobe – is involved in helping the brain to determine whether what we see is from the external world or generated by our imagination. The researchers hope that their findings will increase understanding ...

Glucagon-like peptide-1 receptor agonists and risk of neovascular age-related macular degeneration

2025-06-05
About The Study: In this cohort study, the use of glucagon-like peptide-1 receptor agonists (GLP-1 RAs) among patients with diabetes was associated with a 2-fold higher risk of incident neovascular age-related macular degeneration development than among similar patients with diabetes who did not receive a GLP-1 RA. Further research is needed to elucidate the exact pathophysiological mechanisms involved and to understand the trade-offs between the benefits and risks of GLP-1 RAs.  Corresponding Author: To ...

BMI, physical activity, and subsequent neoplasm risk among childhood cancer survivors

2025-06-05
About The Study: Among childhood cancer survivors in this cohort study, obesity was associated with an increased risk for multiple subsequent neoplasm types, while higher physical activity was associated with reduced subsequent neoplasm risk. Lifestyle interventions should be considered in future subsequent neoplasm prevention research. Corresponding Author: To contact the corresponding author, Lenat Joffe, MD, MS, email ljoffe@northwell.edu. To access the embargoed study: Visit our For The Media website at this link https://media.jamanetwork.com/ (doi:10.1001/jamaoncol.2025.1340) Editor’s Note: Please see the article for additional ...

Chimpanzees can catch yawns from androids

2025-06-05
Chimpanzees (Pan troglodytes) can ‘catch’ yawns from an android imitating human facial expressions, according to new research from City St George’s, University of London. The study, published in Scientific Reports, demonstrates that chimpanzees will both yawn and lie down in response to yawns made by an android, suggesting that it may act as a cue to rest rather than simply triggering an automatic response. The findings appear to show contagious yawning due to an inanimate model for the first time, according to the authors, and the study also ...

The Holberg Prize conferred upon Professor Gayatri Chakravorty Spivak

2025-06-05
At a prestigious award ceremony today in the University Aula in Bergen, Gayatri Chakravorty Spivak received the international research award from HRH Crown Prince Haakon of Norway. Spivak is University Professor in the Humanities at Columbia University. The Holberg Prize is worth NOK 6 million (approx. USD 600,000) and is awarded annually for outstanding contributions to research in the humanities, social sciences, law or theology. Expressing her deepest gratitude as well as her surprise on receiving the award, Spivak accepted the Holberg ...

Up and running—first room-temperature quantum accelerator of its kind in Europe

2025-06-05
To further accelerate its pioneering research in the field of quantum computing, the Fraunhofer Institute for Applied Solid State Physics IAF is expanding its unique quantum computing infrastructure with the latest system from Quantum Brilliance (QB). Following a public tender, the Quantum Development Kit (QB-QDK2.0) is operational and integrated directly into the high-performance computing infrastructure at Fraunhofer IAF. The system requires no cryogenics, fits into a standard 19” server rack, and enables energy-efficient, hybrid quantum-classical computing in conventional IT environments. ...

Using swarm intelligence to improve treatment of acute stroke

2025-06-05
Researchers at DZNE and the Department of Vascular Neurology at the University Hospital Bonn (UKB) aim to develop a computer model based on artificial intelligence (AI) to aid doctors in treating stroke patients. Serving as a digital assistance system, it is intended to predict the long-term outcome of patients after a minimally invasive treatment (mechanical thrombectomy) and potential complications, thereby helping doctors decide on the best possible therapy. A proof-of-concept study will now be undertaken to determine whether this is feasible using data from the “German Stroke Registry” and additional brain images. The project relies on an AI technology called “Swarm ...

Weight stigma—not BMI—has the biggest effect on mental health after weight-loss surgery

2025-06-05
New research shows that weight stigma—and not weight itself—has the biggest impact on mental health and healthy behaviors in the years after weight-loss surgery. Researchers found that patients who had gone through weight-loss surgery tended to experience much less weight stigma, and that this reduction in weight stigma—but not lower BMI—was associated with healthier eating habits and better mental health. On the other hand, continuing to experience stigma after surgery was associated with higher risks of ...

Research alert: Alzheimer's gene therapy shows promise in preserving cognitive function

2025-06-05
Researchers at University of California San Diego School of Medicine have developed a gene therapy for Alzheimer’s disease that could help protect the brain from damage and preserve cognitive function. Unlike existing treatments for Alzheimer’s that target unhealthy protein deposits in the brain, the new approach could help address the root cause of Alzheimer’s disease by influencing the behavior of brain cells themselves. Alzheimer's disease affects millions of people around the world and occurs when abnormal ...

New York Eye and Ear Infirmary of Mount Sinai opens first Comprehensive Center for Refractive Solutions in New York

2025-06-05
New York Eye and Ear Infirmary of Mount Sinai (NYEE) has announced the opening of the Center for Refractive Solutions—the first in New York City and one of few in the United States—that offers comprehensive and innovative treatment options for those who require refractive correction. This includes premium cataract and intraocular lens surgery, and corneal refractive procedures such as LASIK, to reduce patients’ dependency on glasses and contact lenses. The newly renovated space, located at 310 East 14th Street in Lower Manhattan, is solely dedicated ...

LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:

COVID-19 during pregnancy linked to higher risk of neurodevelopmental disorders in children

How a chorus of synchronized frequencies helps you digest your food

UAlbany researcher partners on $1.2 million NSF grant to explore tropical monsoon rainfall patterns

Checkup time for Fido? Wait might be longer in the country

Genetic variation impact scores: A new tool for earlier heart disease detection

The Lundquist Institute awarded $9 million to launch Community Center of Excellence for Regenerative Medicine

'Really bizarre and exciting': The quantum oscillations are coming from inside

Is AI becoming selfish?

New molten salt method gives old lithium batteries a second life

Leg, foot amputations increased 65% in Illinois hospitals between 2016-2023

Moffitt studies uncover complementary strategies to overcome resistance to KRAS G12Cinhibitors in lung cancer

National summit of experts charts unprecedented roadmap to reduce harms from firearms in new ways

Global environmental DNA (eDNA) surveys significantly expand known geographic and ecological niche ranges of marine fish, highlighting current biases in conservation and ecological modeling

Hundreds of animal studies on brain damage after stroke flagged for problematic images

Prize winner’s research reveals how complex neural circuits are correctly wired during brain development

Supershear rupture sustained in thick fault zone during 2025 Mandalay earthquake, study in research package shows

Study reveals how brain cell networks stabilize memory formation

CTE: More than just head trauma, suggests new study

New psychology study suggests chimpanzees might be rational thinkers

Study links genetic variants to higher 'bad' cholesterol and heart attack risk

Myanmar fault had ideal geometry to produce 2025 supershear earthquake

Breakthrough in BRCA2 research: a novel mechanism behind chemoresistance discovered

New funding for health economics research on substance use disorder treatments

Tying protein to fraying DNA solves mystery of illness for patients around the world

MD Anderson shares latest research breakthroughs

19 women’s college basketball coaches join forces to improve women’s cardiovascular health

Palaeontology: How ammolite gemstones get their vivid colours

New study explores ‘legacy effects’ of soil microbes on plants across Kansas

Nanotyrannus confirmed: Dueling dinosaurs fossil rewrites the story of T. rex

How do planets get wet? Experiments show water creation during planet formation process

[Press-News.org] New AI transforms radiology with speed, accuracy never seen before
In a major clinical study, the tool boosted productivity by up to 40% without compromising accuracy