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Differences and similarities in false interpretations by AI CAD and radiologists in screening mammography

Authors :
Salim, Mattie
Dembrower, Karin
Eklund, Martin
Smith, Kevin
Strand, Fredrik
Salim, Mattie
Dembrower, Karin
Eklund, Martin
Smith, Kevin
Strand, Fredrik
Publication Year :
2023

Abstract

OBJECTIVE: We aimed to evaluate the false interpretations between artificial intelligence (AI) and radiologists in screening mammography to get a better understanding of how the distribution of diagnostic mistakes might change when moving from entirely radiologist-driven to AI-integrated breast cancer screening. METHODS AND MATERIALS: This retrospective case-control study was based on a mammography screening cohort from 2008 to 2015. The final study population included screening examinations for 714 women diagnosed with breast cancer and 8029 randomly selected healthy controls. Oversampling of controls was applied to attain a similar cancer proportion as in the source screening cohort. We examined how false-positive (FP) and false-negative (FN) assessments by AI, the first reader (RAD 1) and the second reader (RAD 2), were associated with age, density, tumor histology and cancer invasiveness in a single- and double-reader setting. RESULTS: For each reader, the FN assessments were distributed between low- and high-density females with 53 (42%) and 72 (58%) for AI; 59 (36%) and 104 (64%) for RAD 1 and 47 (36%) and 84 (64%) for RAD 2. The corresponding numbers for FP assessments were 1820 (47%) and 2016 (53%) for AI; 1568 (46%) and 1834 (54%) for RAD 1 and 1190 (43%) and 1610 (58%) for RAD 2. For ductal cancer, the FN assessments were 79 (77%) for AI CAD; with 120 (83%) for RAD 1 and with 96 (16%) for RAD 2. For the double-reading simulation, the FP assessments were distributed between younger and older females with 2828 (2.5%) and 1554 (1.4%) for RAD 1 + RAD 2; 3850 (3.4%) and 2940 (2.6%) for AI+RAD 1 and 3430 (3%) and 2772 (2.5%) for AI+RAD 2. CONCLUSION: The most pronounced decrease in FN assessments was noted for females over the age of 55 and for high density-women. In conclusion, AI could have an important complementary role when combined with radiologists to increase sensitivity for high-density and older females. ADVANCES IN KNOWLEDGE: Our results highlight the<br />QC 20240403

Details

Database :
OAIster
Notes :
English
Publication Type :
Electronic Resource
Accession number :
edsoai.on1428115038
Document Type :
Electronic Resource
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1259.bjr.20230210