Clinical Trials Directory

Trials / Unknown

UnknownNCT05974163

Development of an AI-based Emergency Imaging Multi-Disease Rapid Joint Screening System

Development of a Multi-Disease Screening System for Emergency CT Imaging Based on Artificial Intelligence

Status
Unknown
Phase
Study type
Observational
Enrollment
10,000 (estimated)
Sponsor
Sun Yat-Sen Memorial Hospital of Sun Yat-Sen University · Academic / Other
Sex
All
Age
18 Years – 100 Years
Healthy volunteers
Accepted

Summary

Introduction: Early and rapid diagnosis of etiology is often an important part of saving the lives of patients in emergency department. Chest CT is an important examination method for emergency diagnosis because of its fast examination speed and accurate localization. Traditional medical imaging diagnosis relies on radiologists to report in a qualitative and subjective manner. Through the interdisciplinary combination of clinical, imaging and artificial intelligence, the integration of multi-omics data, the construction of large-scale language models, and the construction of the auxiliary diagnosis support system of "one check for multiple diseases" provide new ideas and means for the rapid and accurate screening of emergency critical diseases. Method: Study design Investigators retrospectively collected cardiovascular, respiratory, digestive, and neurological CT images, demographic data, medical history and laboratory date of emergency department patients during the period from 1 January 2018 and 30 December 2024. Regularly carry out standardized follow-up work, and complete the collection and database establishment of clinical-imaging multi-omics data of patients attending emergency department.The inclusion criteria are:1. adult emergency patients with cardiovascular, respiratory, digestive, and nervous system diseases; 2. These patients had CT images. Patients with incomplete clinical or radiographic data were excluded from the analysis. Regularly carry out standardized follow-up work, and complete the collection and database establishment of clinical-imaging multi-omics data of patients attending emergency department. Based on the collected medical text data, an artificial intelligence large-scale language model algorithm framework is built. After the structure annotation of chest CT images is performed by doctors above the intermediate level of imaging, the Transformer deep neural network is trained for CT image segmentation, and a series of tasks such as structural structure segmentation, damage detection, disease classification and automatic report generation are developed based on Vision Transformer self-attention architecture mechanism. A multi-disease diagnosis and treatment decision-making system based on chest CT images, clinical text and examination multimodal data was constructed and validated. Disscusion Emergency medicine deals mainly with unpredictable critical and sudden illnesses. Patients who come to the emergency department for medical treatment often have acute onset, hidden condition, rapid progress, many complications, high mortality and disability rate. Assisted diagnosis systems developed by combining clinical text, images and artificial intelligence can greatly improve the ability of emergency department doctors to accurately diagnose diseases. This study fills the blank of CT artificial intelligence aided diagnosis system for emergency patients, and provides a rapid diagnosis scheme for multi-system and multi-disease. Finally, the results will be transformed into clinical application software and used and promoted in clinical work to improve the diagnosis and treatment level.

Conditions

Interventions

TypeNameDescription
DIAGNOSTIC_TESTradiomic of CTComputed Tomography (CT) is often an important examination method for emergency diagnosis because of its fast examination speed and accurate localization acute respiratory distress syndrome.

Timeline

Start date
2023-08-01
Primary completion
2024-07-31
Completion
2025-07-31
First posted
2023-08-03
Last updated
2023-08-03

Locations

1 site across 1 country: China

Source: ClinicalTrials.gov record NCT05974163. Inclusion in this directory is not an endorsement.