A Randomized Controlled Trial Comparing Screening Mammography With and Without Assistance From Artificial Intelligence for Breast Cancer Detection and Recall Rates in Adult Patients
Jonsson Comprehensive Cancer Center
Summary
The goal of this clinical trial is to compare patient-centered outcomes when screening digital breast tomosynthesis (DBT) exams are interpreted with versus without a leading FDA-cleared artificial intelligence (AI) decision-support tool in real-world U.S. settings and to assess patients' and radiologists' perspectives on AI in medicine. The main question it aims to answer is: Does an FDA-cleared AI decision-support tool for digital tomosynthesis (DBT) improve screening outcomes in real world US clinical settings? This trial will include all interpreting radiologists and all adult patients undergoing screening mammography at any of the participating breast imaging facilities across 6 regional health systems (University of California, Los Angeles (UCLA), University of California, San Diego (UCSD), University of Washington-Seattle, University of Wisconsin-Madison, Boston Medical Center, and University of Miami) during the trial period. All screening mammograms at these facilities will be randomized to either intervention (radiologist assisted by an AI decision support tool) versus usual care (radiologist alone) to see if interpreting these mammograms with the AI tool's assistance improves patient screening outcomes. We are targeting 400,000 screening exams across the participating health systems in this trial.
Description
During the RCT the AI support tool will be randomized to be turned on or off (1:1) at the mammography exam level. Patients who return for screening exams in year 2 of recruitment will be randomized again (e.g., they will not retain their prior randomization). Radiologists will not be able to sort exams based on AI availability or AI scores. Randomizing by exam level will ensure that we capture a substantial number of interpretations with vs. without AI for each radiologist, allowing for quantification of the radiologist-level AI learning curve. We are not randomizing at the facility level as s…
Eligibility
- Age range
- 18+ years
- Sex
- All
- Healthy volunteers
- Yes
This trial will include all radiologists interpreting screening mammography and all adult patients undergoing screening mammography at any of the participating breast imaging facilities across 6 regional health systems (UCLA, UC San Diego, University of Washington-Seattle, University of Wisconsin-Madison, Boston Medical Center, and University of Miami) during the trial period. Individuals must meet the following eligiblity criteria. Inclusion Criteria: 1. Be at least 18 years of age or older 2. Receive a screening mammogram at one of the participating breast imaging facilities OR be a radiol…
Interventions
- DeviceArtificial intelligence (AI) decision-support tool
The intervention is an AI decision-support tool to help radiologists interpret 3D screening mammograms. For exams randomized to this intervention arm, the first image displayed to the radiologist upon opening an exam on the viewing station will be a one-page, standardized AI report showing the overall exam risk (elevated, intermediate, or low), image region markings, lesion scores from 1-100 (100 being the highest suspicion), bounding boxes, and relevant slice locations for 3D exams. Radiologists can toggle markings on/off and retain full control over the final interpretation of the exam as positive or negative (i.e., they can choose to ignore the AI information). Randomization occurs 1:1 at the exam level via automated code at image acquisition. Returning patients in year two will be re-randomized. Radiologists cannot filter their exam lists by AI availability or risk, and randomization will be independently managed at each participating health system.
Locations (6)
- University of California Los Angeles Health SystemLos Angeles, California
- University of California, San DiegoSan Diego, California
- University of Miami Health SystemMiami, Florida
- Boston Medical CenterBoston, Massachusetts
- University of Washington Health SystemSeattle, Washington
- University of Wisconsin-MadisonMadison, Wisconsin