4.8 Article

An algorithmic approach to reducing unexplained pain disparities in underserved populations

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NATURE MEDICINE
卷 27, 期 1, 页码 136-+

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NATURE RESEARCH
DOI: 10.1038/s41591-020-01192-7

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  1. US Social Security Administration [RDR18000003] Funding Source: Medline

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A deep learning approach using knee X-rays can predict underserved populations' experienced pain and reduce racial and socioeconomic disparities. Algorithmic predictions suggest that much of underserved patients' pain stems from factors within the knee.
Underserved populations experience higher levels of pain. These disparities persist even after controlling for the objective severity of diseases like osteoarthritis, as graded by human physicians using medical images, raising the possibility that underserved patients' pain stems from factors external to the knee, such as stress. Here we use a deep learning approach to measure the severity of osteoarthritis, by using knee X-rays to predict patients' experienced pain. We show that this approach dramatically reduces unexplained racial disparities in pain. Relative to standard measures of severity graded by radiologists, which accounted for only 9% (95% confidence interval (CI), 3-16%) of racial disparities in pain, algorithmic predictions accounted for 43% of disparities, or 4.7x more (95% CI, 3.2-11.8x), with similar results for lower-income and less-educated patients. This suggests that much of underserved patients' pain stems from factors within the knee not reflected in standard radiographic measures of severity. We show that the algorithm's ability to reduce unexplained disparities is rooted in the racial and socioeconomic diversity of the training set. Because algorithmic severity measures better capture underserved patients' pain, and severity measures influence treatment decisions, algorithmic predictions could potentially redress disparities in access to treatments like arthroplasty. An algorithmic, machine-learning approach to measuring severe pain from osteoarthritis applied to X-ray images of knees suggests that reported disparities in knee pain in underserved populations can be reduced by comparison with use of standard radiographic measures of disease severity.

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