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Determinants for scalable adoption of autonomous AI in the detection of diabetic eye disease in diverse practice types: key best practices learned through collection of real-world data

Autonomous Artificial Intelligence (AI) has the potential to reduce disparities, improve quality of care, and reduce cost by improving access to specialty diagnoses at the point-of-care. Diabetes and related complications represent a significant source of health disparities. Vision loss is a complic...

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Autores principales: Goldstein, Juli, Weitzman, Dena, Lemerond, Meghan, Jones, Andrew
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Frontiers Media S.A. 2023
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10232822/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/37274764
http://dx.doi.org/10.3389/fdgth.2023.1004130
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author Goldstein, Juli
Weitzman, Dena
Lemerond, Meghan
Jones, Andrew
author_facet Goldstein, Juli
Weitzman, Dena
Lemerond, Meghan
Jones, Andrew
author_sort Goldstein, Juli
collection PubMed
description Autonomous Artificial Intelligence (AI) has the potential to reduce disparities, improve quality of care, and reduce cost by improving access to specialty diagnoses at the point-of-care. Diabetes and related complications represent a significant source of health disparities. Vision loss is a complication of diabetes, and there is extensive evidence supporting annual eye exams for prevention. Prior to the use of autonomous AI, store-and-forward imaging approaches using remote reading centers (asynchronous telemedicine) attempted to increase diabetes related eye exams with limited success. In 2018, after rigorous clinical validation, the first fully autonomous AI system [LumineticsCore™ (formerly IDx-DR), Digital Diagnostics Inc., Coralville, IA, United States] received U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA) De Novo authorization. The system diagnoses diabetic retinopathy (including macular edema) without specialist physician overread at the point-of-care. In addition to regulatory clearance, reimbursement, and quality measure updates, successful adoption requires local optimization of the clinical workflow. The general challenges of frontline care clinical workflow have been well documented in the literature. Because healthcare AI is so new, there remains a gap in the literature about challenges and opportunities to embed diagnostic AI into the clinical workflow. The goal of this review is to identify common workflow themes leading to successful adoption, measured as attainment number of exams per month using the autonomous AI system against targets set for each health center. We characterized the workflow in four different US health centers over a 12-month period. Health centers were geographically dispersed across the Midwest, Southwest, Northeast, and West Coast and varied distinctly in terms of size, staffing, resources, financing and demographics of patient populations. After 1 year, the aggregated number of diabetes-related exams per month increased from 89 after the first month of initial deployment to 174 across all sites. Across the diverse practice types, three primary determinants underscored sustainable adoption: (1) Inclusion of Executive and Clinical Champions; (2) Underlining Health Center Resources; and (3) Clinical workflows that contemplate patient identification (pre-visit), LumineticsCore Exam Capture and Provider Consult (patient visit), and Timely Referral Triage (post-visit). In addition to regulatory clearance, reimbursement and quality measures, our review shows that addressing the core determinants for workflow optimization is an essential part of large-scale adoption of innovation. These best practices can be generalizable to other autonomous AI systems in front-line care settings, thereby increasing patient access, improving quality of care, and addressing health disparities.
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spelling pubmed-102328222023-06-02 Determinants for scalable adoption of autonomous AI in the detection of diabetic eye disease in diverse practice types: key best practices learned through collection of real-world data Goldstein, Juli Weitzman, Dena Lemerond, Meghan Jones, Andrew Front Digit Health Digital Health Autonomous Artificial Intelligence (AI) has the potential to reduce disparities, improve quality of care, and reduce cost by improving access to specialty diagnoses at the point-of-care. Diabetes and related complications represent a significant source of health disparities. Vision loss is a complication of diabetes, and there is extensive evidence supporting annual eye exams for prevention. Prior to the use of autonomous AI, store-and-forward imaging approaches using remote reading centers (asynchronous telemedicine) attempted to increase diabetes related eye exams with limited success. In 2018, after rigorous clinical validation, the first fully autonomous AI system [LumineticsCore™ (formerly IDx-DR), Digital Diagnostics Inc., Coralville, IA, United States] received U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA) De Novo authorization. The system diagnoses diabetic retinopathy (including macular edema) without specialist physician overread at the point-of-care. In addition to regulatory clearance, reimbursement, and quality measure updates, successful adoption requires local optimization of the clinical workflow. The general challenges of frontline care clinical workflow have been well documented in the literature. Because healthcare AI is so new, there remains a gap in the literature about challenges and opportunities to embed diagnostic AI into the clinical workflow. The goal of this review is to identify common workflow themes leading to successful adoption, measured as attainment number of exams per month using the autonomous AI system against targets set for each health center. We characterized the workflow in four different US health centers over a 12-month period. Health centers were geographically dispersed across the Midwest, Southwest, Northeast, and West Coast and varied distinctly in terms of size, staffing, resources, financing and demographics of patient populations. After 1 year, the aggregated number of diabetes-related exams per month increased from 89 after the first month of initial deployment to 174 across all sites. Across the diverse practice types, three primary determinants underscored sustainable adoption: (1) Inclusion of Executive and Clinical Champions; (2) Underlining Health Center Resources; and (3) Clinical workflows that contemplate patient identification (pre-visit), LumineticsCore Exam Capture and Provider Consult (patient visit), and Timely Referral Triage (post-visit). In addition to regulatory clearance, reimbursement and quality measures, our review shows that addressing the core determinants for workflow optimization is an essential part of large-scale adoption of innovation. These best practices can be generalizable to other autonomous AI systems in front-line care settings, thereby increasing patient access, improving quality of care, and addressing health disparities. Frontiers Media S.A. 2023-05-18 /pmc/articles/PMC10232822/ /pubmed/37274764 http://dx.doi.org/10.3389/fdgth.2023.1004130 Text en © 2023 Goldstein, Weitzman, Lemerond and Jones. https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (CC BY) (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/) . The use, distribution or reproduction in other forums is permitted, provided the original author(s) and the copyright owner(s) are credited and that the original publication in this journal is cited, in accordance with accepted academic practice. No use, distribution or reproduction is permitted which does not comply with these terms.
spellingShingle Digital Health
Goldstein, Juli
Weitzman, Dena
Lemerond, Meghan
Jones, Andrew
Determinants for scalable adoption of autonomous AI in the detection of diabetic eye disease in diverse practice types: key best practices learned through collection of real-world data
title Determinants for scalable adoption of autonomous AI in the detection of diabetic eye disease in diverse practice types: key best practices learned through collection of real-world data
title_full Determinants for scalable adoption of autonomous AI in the detection of diabetic eye disease in diverse practice types: key best practices learned through collection of real-world data
title_fullStr Determinants for scalable adoption of autonomous AI in the detection of diabetic eye disease in diverse practice types: key best practices learned through collection of real-world data
title_full_unstemmed Determinants for scalable adoption of autonomous AI in the detection of diabetic eye disease in diverse practice types: key best practices learned through collection of real-world data
title_short Determinants for scalable adoption of autonomous AI in the detection of diabetic eye disease in diverse practice types: key best practices learned through collection of real-world data
title_sort determinants for scalable adoption of autonomous ai in the detection of diabetic eye disease in diverse practice types: key best practices learned through collection of real-world data
topic Digital Health
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10232822/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/37274764
http://dx.doi.org/10.3389/fdgth.2023.1004130
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