Clinical Trials Directory

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Not Yet RecruitingNCT06921447

Evaluating Decision-making Using ChatGPT-4 Among Trainees in Surgery

Evaluating ChatGPT-4 as a Decision-Making Support Tool for Surgical Trainees

Status
Not Yet Recruiting
Phase
Study type
Observational
Enrollment
35 (estimated)
Sponsor
Ospedali Riuniti Trieste · Academic / Other
Sex
All
Age
Healthy volunteers
Not accepted

Summary

This study aims to assess whether ChatGPT-4 can support surgical trainees in clinical decision-making. By comparing the performance of ChatGPT-4 with junior residents, senior residents, and attending surgeons on standardized clinical scenarios, the study seeks to understand the potential role of large language models in surgical education. The ultimate goal is to evaluate whether ChatGPT-4 can be safely integrated as a supplementary educational tool to aid junior residents in developing critical thinking and surgical judgment.

Detailed description

Background: Artificial Intelligence (AI) is rapidly transforming the medical landscape, offering new possibilities in education, diagnostics, and decision support. In surgery, clinical decision-making is a core competency developed progressively through training. ChatGPT-4, a state-of-the-art large language model developed by OpenAI, has demonstrated competence in handling medical queries and clinical reasoning tasks. However, its performance in complex surgical decision-making compared to human trainees remains largely unexplored. Objective: The EDuCATe study aims to evaluate the accuracy and reliability of ChatGPT-4's responses to clinical scenarios involving general surgery cases. Specifically, the study compares the model's performance to that of junior residents, senior residents, and attending surgeons to understand if ChatGPT-4 can serve as a safe and effective educational tool for surgical trainees. Methods: Seven clinical scenarios will be constructed using real anonymized patient data representing common general surgery conditions. Each case will be presented step-by-step, mimicking the clinical decision-making process. Participants will answer a question related to treatment choice. Participants will include junior residents (PGY1-2), senior residents (PGY3+), and attending surgeons from a single surgical department. ChatGPT-4 will be prompted with the same scenarios. All participants will be instructed to complete the cases without using external resources such as AI tools or internet searches, relying solely on their clinical knowledge. Statistical analysis will compare performance across groups using non-parametric tests (e.g., Wilcoxon rank sum). Expected Outcomes: The study hypothesizes that ChatGPT-4 will perform at a level comparable to senior residents or attending surgeons and outperform junior residents in decision-making. If confirmed, these results could support the safe use of ChatGPT-4 as a training aid for junior surgical residents, potentially improving educational outcomes and clinical reasoning skills. Significance: This study will provide novel insight into the role of AI in surgical education. By rigorously comparing ChatGPT-4's decision-making capabilities to that of human surgeons at various levels, the study hopes to define its utility, limitations, and appropriate use in residency training programs.

Conditions

Interventions

TypeNameDescription
OTHERClinical CasesSeven clinical cases that have to be analysed

Timeline

Start date
2025-04-10
Primary completion
2025-04-25
Completion
2025-04-30
First posted
2025-04-10
Last updated
2025-04-10

Locations

1 site across 1 country: Italy

Source: ClinicalTrials.gov record NCT06921447. Inclusion in this directory is not an endorsement.