Clinician-Driven AI: Code-Free Self-Training on Public Data for Diabetic Retinopathy Referral.


Journal

JAMA ophthalmology
ISSN: 2168-6173
Titre abrégé: JAMA Ophthalmol
Pays: United States
ID NLM: 101589539

Informations de publication

Date de publication:
01 Nov 2023
Historique:
pmc-release: 19 10 2024
medline: 17 11 2023
pubmed: 19 10 2023
entrez: 19 10 2023
Statut: ppublish

Résumé

Democratizing artificial intelligence (AI) enables model development by clinicians with a lack of coding expertise, powerful computing resources, and large, well-labeled data sets. To determine whether resource-constrained clinicians can use self-training via automated machine learning (ML) and public data sets to design high-performing diabetic retinopathy classification models. This diagnostic quality improvement study was conducted from January 1, 2021, to December 31, 2021. A self-training method without coding was used on 2 public data sets with retinal images from patients in France (Messidor-2 [n = 1748]) and the UK and US (EyePACS [n = 58 689]) and externally validated on 1 data set with retinal images from patients of a private Egyptian medical retina clinic (Egypt [n = 210]). An AI model was trained to classify referable diabetic retinopathy as an exemplar use case. Messidor-2 images were assigned adjudicated labels available on Kaggle; 4 images were deemed ungradable and excluded, leaving 1744 images. A total of 300 images randomly selected from the EyePACS data set were independently relabeled by 3 blinded retina specialists using the International Classification of Diabetic Retinopathy protocol for diabetic retinopathy grade and diabetic macular edema presence; 19 images were deemed ungradable, leaving 281 images. Data analysis was performed from February 1 to February 28, 2021. Using public data sets, a teacher model was trained with labeled images using supervised learning. Next, the resulting predictions, termed pseudolabels, were used on an unlabeled public data set. Finally, a student model was trained with the existing labeled images and the additional pseudolabeled images. The analyzed metrics for the models included the area under the receiver operating characteristic curve (AUROC), accuracy, sensitivity, specificity, and F1 score. The Fisher exact test was performed, and 2-tailed P values were calculated for failure case analysis. For the internal validation data sets, AUROC values for performance ranged from 0.886 to 0.939 for the teacher model and from 0.916 to 0.951 for the student model. For external validation of automated ML model performance, AUROC values and accuracy were 0.964 and 93.3% for the teacher model, 0.950 and 96.7% for the student model, and 0.890 and 94.3% for the manually coded bespoke model, respectively. These findings suggest that self-training using automated ML is an effective method to increase both model performance and generalizability while decreasing the need for costly expert labeling. This approach advances the democratization of AI by enabling clinicians without coding expertise or access to large, well-labeled private data sets to develop their own AI models.

Identifiants

pubmed: 37856110
pii: 2810431
doi: 10.1001/jamaophthalmol.2023.4508
pmc: PMC10587830
doi:

Types de publication

Journal Article

Langues

eng

Sous-ensembles de citation

IM

Pagination

1029-1036

Subventions

Organisme : Medical Research Council
ID : MC_PC_19005
Pays : United Kingdom
Organisme : Medical Research Council
ID : MR/T019050/1
Pays : United Kingdom

Auteurs

Edward Korot (E)

Retina Specialists of Michigan, Grand Rapids.
Moorfields Eye Hospital, London, United Kingdom.
Stanford University Byers Eye Institute, Palo Alto, California.

Mariana Batista Gonçalves (MB)

Moorfields Eye Hospital, London, United Kingdom.
Federal University of Sao Paulo, Sao Paulo, Brazil.
Instituto da Visão, Sao Paulo, Brazil.

Josef Huemer (J)

Moorfields Eye Hospital, London, United Kingdom.

Sara Beqiri (S)

Moorfields Eye Hospital, London, United Kingdom.
University College London Medical School, London, United Kingdom.

Hagar Khalid (H)

Moorfields Eye Hospital, London, United Kingdom.
Ophthalmology Department, Faculty of Medicine, Tanta University Hospital, Tanta, Gharbia, Egypt.

Madeline Kelly (M)

Moorfields Eye Hospital, London, United Kingdom.
University College London Medical School, London, United Kingdom.
UCL Centre for Medical Image Computing, London, United Kingdom.

Mark Chia (M)

Moorfields Eye Hospital, London, United Kingdom.

Emily Mathijs (E)

Michigan State University College of Osteopathic Medicine, East Lansing.

Robbert Struyven (R)

Moorfields Eye Hospital, London, United Kingdom.

Magdy Moussa (M)

Ophthalmology Department, Faculty of Medicine, Tanta University Hospital, Tanta, Gharbia, Egypt.

Pearse A Keane (PA)

Moorfields Eye Hospital, London, United Kingdom.

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