Aims: Structured reporting in pathology is not universally adopted and extracting elements essential to research often requires expensive and time-intensive manual curation. The accuracy and feasibility of using large language models (LLMs) to extract essential pathology elements, for cancer research is examined here.
Methods: Retrospective study of patients who underwent pathology sampling for suspected hepatocellular carcinoma and underwent Ytrrium-90 embolisation. Five pathology report elements of interest were included for evaluation. LLMs (Generative Pre-trained Transformer (GPT) 3.5 turbo and GPT-4) were used to extract elements of interest. For comparison, a rules-based, regular expressions (REGEX) approach was devised for extraction. Accuracy for each approach was calculated.
Results: 88 pathology reports were identified. LLMs and REGEX were both able to extract research elements with high accuracy (average 84.1%-94.8%).
Conclusions: LLMs have significant potential to simplify the extraction of research elements from pathology reporting, and therefore, accelerate the pace of cancer research.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1136/jcp-2024-209669 | DOI Listing |
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