4.8 Article

Clinical integration of machine learning for curative-intent radiation treatment of patients with prostate cancer

期刊

NATURE MEDICINE
卷 27, 期 6, 页码 999-+

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NATURE PORTFOLIO
DOI: 10.1038/s41591-021-01359-w

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资金

  1. Canadian Institutes of Health Research [381340]
  2. Collaborative Health Research Projects (National Sciences and Engineering Research Council of Canada)
  3. Princess Margaret Cancer Foundation

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The study demonstrates the potential impact of machine learning in healthcare delivery, with a random forest algorithm applied to therapeutic radiation therapy planning for prostate cancer. Machine-generated RT plans were found to be clinically acceptable in 89% of cases and were selected over human-generated plans in 72% of head-to-head comparisons, significantly reducing the time required for RT planning.
Machine learning (ML) holds great promise for impacting healthcare delivery; however, to date most methods are tested in 'simulated' environments that cannot recapitulate factors influencing real-world clinical practice. We prospectively deployed and evaluated a random forest algorithm for therapeutic curative-intent radiation therapy (RT) treatment planning for prostate cancer in a blinded, head-to-head study with full integration into the clinical workflow. ML- and human-generated RT treatment plans were directly compared in a retrospective simulation with retesting (n = 50) and a prospective clinical deployment (n = 50) phase. Consistently throughout the study phases, treating physicians assessed ML- and human-generated RT treatment plans in a blinded manner following a priori defined standardized criteria and peer review processes, with the selected RT plan in the prospective phase delivered for patient treatment. Overall, 89% of ML-generated RT plans were considered clinically acceptable and 72% were selected over human-generated RT plans in head-to-head comparisons. RT planning using ML reduced the median time required for the entire RT planning process by 60.1% (118 to 47 h). While ML RT plan acceptability remained stable between the simulation and deployment phases (92 versus 86%), the number of ML RT plans selected for treatment was significantly reduced (83 versus 61%, respectively). These findings highlight that retrospective or simulated evaluation of ML methods, even under expert blinded review, may not be representative of algorithm acceptance in a real-world clinical setting when patient care is at stake. An artificial intelligence system prospectively deployed to design radiation therapy plans for patients with prostate cancer illustrates the real-world impact of machine learning in clinical practice and identifies factors influencing human-algorithm interaction

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