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In Endocrine

PURPOSE : To evaluate the application value of a generally trained artificial intelligence (AI) automatic diagnosis system in the malignancy diagnosis of rare thyroid carcinomas, such as follicular thyroid carcinoma, medullary thyroid carcinoma, primary thyroid lymphoma and anaplastic thyroid carcinoma and compare the diagnostic performance with radiologists of different experience levels.

METHODS : We retrospectively studied 342 patients with 378 thyroid nodules that included 196 rare malignant nodules by using postoperative pathology as the gold standard, and compared the diagnostic performances of three radiologists (one junior, one mid-level, one senior) and that of AI automatic diagnosis system.

RESULTS : The accuracy of the AI system in malignancy diagnosis was 0.825, which was significantly higher than that of all three radiologists and higher than the best radiologist in this study by a margin of 0.097 with P-value of 2.252 × 10-16. The mid-level radiologist and senior radiologist had higher sensitivity (0.857 and 0.959) than that of the AI system (0.847) at the cost of having much lower specificity (0.533, 0.478 versus 0.802). The junior radiologist showed relatively balanced sensitivity and specificity (0.816 and 0.549) but both were lower than that of the AI system.

CONCLUSIONS : The generally trained AI automatic diagnosis system showed high accuracy in the differential diagnosis of begin nodules and rare malignancy nodules. It may assist radiologists for screening of rare malignancy nodules that even senior radiologists are not acquainted with.

Wang Yuan, Xu Lei, Lu Wenliang, Kong Xiangkai, Shi Kaiyuan, Wang Liping, Kong Dexing

2022-Dec-03

AI automatic diagnosis system, Radiologists, Rare thyroid carcinomas, Ultrasonic