Litcius/Paper detail

Artificial intelligence in small bowel capsule endoscopy ‐ current status, challenges and future promise

Xavier Dray, Dimitris K. Iakovidis, Charles Houdeville, Rodrigo Jover, Dimitris Diamantis, Aymeric Histace, Anastasios Koulaouzidis

2021Journal of Gastroenterology and Hepatology78 citationsDOI

Abstract

Neural network-based solutions are under development to alleviate physicians from the tedious task of small-bowel capsule endoscopy reviewing. Computer-assisted detection is a critical step, aiming to reduce reading times while maintaining accuracy. Weakly supervised solutions have shown promising results; however, video-level evaluations are scarce, and no prospective studies have been conducted yet. Automated characterization (in terms of diagnosis and pertinence) by supervised machine learning solutions is the next step. It relies on large, thoroughly labeled databases, for which preliminary "ground truth" definitions by experts are of tremendous importance. Other developments are under ways, to assist physicians in localizing anatomical landmarks and findings in the small bowel, in measuring lesions, and in rating bowel cleanliness. It is still questioned whether artificial intelligence will enter the market with proprietary, built-in or plug-in software, or with a universal cloud-based service, and how it will be accepted by physicians and patients.

Topics & Concepts

MedicineCapsule endoscopyTask (project management)Artificial intelligenceReading (process)EndoscopyMedical physicsMachine learningComputer scienceRadiologyManagementPolitical scienceLawEconomicsGastrointestinal Bleeding Diagnosis and TreatmentColorectal Cancer Screening and DetectionGastric Cancer Management and Outcomes