AI Article Synopsis

  • The paper explores barriers to using AI in Health Technology Assessment (HTA) systems in Central and Eastern Europe, utilizing a literature review and focus group discussions for insights.
  • Most studies reviewed focus on clinical applications of AI, with a smaller number analyzing regulatory aspects and knowledge transfer, highlighting that many articles describe AI methods rather than their barriers.
  • Barriers found are categorized into data, methodology, technology, regulation, policy, and human factors, with a call for expert opinions to develop recommendations for overcoming these challenges and effectively integrating AI tools into HTA processes.

Article Abstract

The aim of this paper is to identify the barriers that are specifically relevant to the use of Artificial Intelligence (AI)-based evidence in Central and Eastern European (CEE) Health Technology Assessment (HTA) systems. The study relied on two main parallel sources to identify barriers to use AI methodologies in HTA in CEE, including a scoping literature review and iterative focus group meetings with HTx team members. Most of the other selected articles discussed AI from a clinical perspective ( = 25), and the rest are from regulatory perspective ( = 13), and transfer of knowledge point of view ( = 3). Clinical areas studied are quite diverse-from pediatric, diabetes, diagnostic radiology, gynecology, oncology, surgery, psychiatry, cardiology, infection diseases, and oncology. Out of all 38 articles, 25 (66%) describe the AI method and the rest are more focused on the utilization barriers of different health care services and programs. The potential barriers could be classified as data related, methodological, technological, regulatory and policy related, and human factor related. Some of the barriers are quite similar, especially concerning the technologies. Studies focusing on the AI usage for HTA decision making are scarce. AI and augmented decision making tools are a novel science, and we are in the process of adapting it to existing needs. HTA as a process requires multiple steps, multiple evaluations which rely on heterogenous data. Therefore, the observed range of barriers come as a no surprise, and experts in the field need to give their opinion on the most important barriers in order to develop recommendations to overcome them and to disseminate the practical application of these tools.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9330148PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.3389/fpubh.2022.921226DOI Listing

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