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Assistive artificial intelligence for ultrasound image interpretation in regional anaesthesia : an external validation study

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Date
02/2023
Author
Bowness, James Simeon
Burckett-St Laurent, David
Hernandez, Nadia
Keane, Pearse
Lobo, Clara
Moka, Eleni
Pawa, Amit
Rosenblatt, Meg
Sleep, Nick
Taylor, Alasdair
Woodworth, Glenn
Vasalauskaite, Asta
Noble, J Alison
Higham, Helen
Keywords
Anatomy
Artificial intelligence
Machine learning
Regional anaesthesia
Translational AI
Ultrasonography
Ultrsound
DAS
NIS
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Abstract
BACKGROUND: Ultrasonound is used to identify anatomical structures during regional anaesthesia and to guide needle insertion and injection of local anaesthetic. ScanNav Anatomy Peripheral Nerve Block (Intelligent Ultrasound, Cardiff, UK) is an artificial intelligence-based device that produces a colour overlay on real-time B-mode ultrasound to highlight anatomical structures of interest. We evaluated the accuracy of the artificial-intelligence colour overlay and its perceived influence on risk of adverse events or block failure. METHODS: Ultrasound-guided regional anaesthesia experts acquired 720 videos from 40 volunteers (across nine anatomical regions) without using the device. The artificial-intelligence colour overlay was subsequently applied. Three more experts independently reviewed each video (with the original unmodified video) to assess accuracy of the colour overlay in relation to key anatomical structures (true positive/negative and false positive/negative) and the potential for highlighting to modify perceived risk of adverse events (needle trauma to nerves, arteries, pleura, and peritoneum) or block failure. RESULTS: The artificial-intelligence models identified the structure of interest in 93.5% of cases (1519/1624), with a false-negative rate of 3.0% (48/1624) and a false-positive rate of 3.5% (57/1624). Highlighting was judged to reduce the risk of unwanted needle trauma to nerves, arteries, pleura, and peritoneum in 62.9-86.4% of cases (302/480 to 345/400), and to increase the risk in 0.0-1.7% (0/160 to 8/480). Risk of block failure was reported to be reduced in 81.3% of scans (585/720) and to be increased in 1.8% (13/720). CONCLUSIONS: Artificial intelligence-based devices can potentially aid image acquisition and interpretation in ultrasound-guided regional anaesthesia. Further studies are necessary to demonstrate their effectiveness in supporting training and clinical practice. CLINICAL TRIAL REGISTRATION: NCT04906018.
Citation
Bowness , J S , Burckett-St Laurent , D , Hernandez , N , Keane , P , Lobo , C , Moka , E , Pawa , A , Rosenblatt , M , Sleep , N , Taylor , A , Woodworth , G , Vasalauskaite , A , Noble , J A & Higham , H 2023 , ' Assistive artificial intelligence for ultrasound image interpretation in regional anaesthesia : an external validation study ' , British Journal of Anaesthesia , vol. 130 , no. 2 , pp. 217-225 . https://doi.org/10.1016/j.bja.2022.06.031
Publication
British Journal of Anaesthesia
Status
Peer reviewed
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.bja.2022.06.031
ISSN
0007-0912
Type
Journal article
Rights
Copyright © 2022 The Author(s). Published by Elsevier Ltd on behalf of British Journal of Anaesthesia. This is an open access article under the CC BY license (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/).
Description
Intelligent Ultrasound Limited (Cardiff, UK) via a grant to JSB administered by the University of Oxford (R70327/CN002).
Collections
  • University of St Andrews Research
URI
http://hdl.handle.net/10023/26810

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