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The use of Artificial Intelligence Systems in Diagnosis of Pneumonia via signs and symptoms: a systematic review

Authors :
Rossana Castaldo
Marco Salvatore
Leandro Pecchia
Katy Stokes
Carlo Federici
Monica Franzese
Francesco P. Cappuccio
Silvio Marcello Pagliara
Giuseppe Fico
Alessia Maccaro
Stokes, Katy
Castaldo, Rossana
Federici, Carlo
Pagliara, Silvio
Maccaro, Alessia
Cappuccio, Francesco
Fico, Giuseppe
Salvatore, Marco
Franzese, Monica
Pecchia, Leandro
Source :
Biomedical Signal Processing and Control
Publication Year :
2021

Abstract

Artificial Intelligence (AI) systems using symptoms/signs to detect respiratory diseases may improve diagnosis especially in limited resource settings. Heterogeneity in such AI systems creates an ongoing need to analyse performance to inform future research. This systematic literature review aimed to investigate performance and reporting of diagnostic AI systems using machine learning (ML) for pneumonia detection based on symptoms and signs, and to provide recommendations on best practices for designing and implementing predictive ML algorithms. This article was conducted following the PRISMA protocol, 876 articles were identified by searching PubMed, Scopus, and OvidSP databases (last search 5th May 2021). For inclusion, studies must have differentiated clinically diagnosed pneumonia from controls or other diseases using AI. Risk of Bias was evaluated using The STARD 2015 tool. Information was extracted from 16 included studies regarding study characteristics, ML-model features, reference tests, study population, accuracy measures and ethical aspects. All included studies were highly heterogenous concerning the study design, setting of diagnosis, study population and ML algorithm. Study reporting quality in methodology and results was low. Ethical issues surrounding design and implementation of the AI algorithms were not well explored. Although no single performance measure was used in all studies, most reported an accuracy measure over 90%. There is strong evidence to support further investigations of ML to automatically detect pneumonia based on easily recognisable symptoms and signs. To help improve the efficacy of future research, recommendations for designing and implementing AI tools based on the findings of this study are provided.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
17468094
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Biomedical Signal Processing and Control
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....1360a904bc68acd2c32f3e0f3259cee1