BEIJING, Oct. 16 (Xinhua) -- Chinese researchers have published a paper in the journal Nature Communications earlier this month proposing an artificial intelligence model that can help doctors quickly differentiate between COVID-19, influenza and other pneumonia with high accuracy.
Since the COVID-19 outbreak, numerous AI systems have been developed and used for frontline detection and diagnosis, such as analyzing chest X-rays and CT scans. However, with flu season approaching, if COVID-19 and influenza were to break out together, causing CT diagnosis workload to skyrocket, differentiating between the two respiratory illnesses would prove challenging for doctors.
A new AI model may provide the answer. Researchers from Tsinghua University and Wuhan-based Huazhong University of Science and Technology have developed and evaluated an AI system using a large dataset with more than 11,000 CT volumes from COVID-19, influenza, non-viral community-acquired pneumonia and non-pneumonia.
According to the paper, CT volumes of COVID-19 patients were collected mainly from February to March at three hospitals in Wuhan, once the epicenter of the COVID-19 epidemic in China.
The AI model, known as a deep convolutional neural network-based system, turned detection experiences accumulated by experts into algorithms. Test results showed that it can differentiate COVID-19 and influenza from other pneumonia with an AUC of 97.8, indicating a high degree of detection accuracy.
In further studies, the research team compared the diagnostic performance of this CT-based AI system with that of five radiologists, and results show that the performance of the system is greater than that of its human counterparts.
The AI model will help lessen the workload of doctors. The study shows that the average reading time of radiologists was 6.5 minutes, while that of the AI system was 2.73 seconds.
Using CT lung screening to differentiate COVID-19 from other pneumonia is difficult, due to the high similarities of pneumonia of different types, especially in the early stage, and large variations in different stages of the same type. Therefore, developing an AI diagnosis algorithm specific to COVID-19 is necessary, said co-author Feng Jianjiang at Tsinghua University, also an expert in fingerprint recognition and computer vision.
The AI diagnosis algorithm also has the advantages of high repeatability and easy large-scale deployment, showing the potential to become a new tool to control the spread of COVID-19, according to Feng.