Litcius/Paper detail

Cost-effectiveness requirements for implementing artificial intelligence technology in the Women’s UK Breast Cancer Screening service

Armando Vargas‐Palacios, Nisha Sharma, Gurdeep S. Sagoo

2023Nature Communications43 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

The UK NHS Women's National Breast Screening programme aims to detect breast cancer early. The reference standard approach requires mammograms to be independently double-read by qualified radiology staff. If two readers disagree, arbitration by an independent reader is undertaken. Whilst this process maximises accuracy and minimises recall rates, the procedure is labour-intensive, adding pressure to a system currently facing a workforce crisis. Artificial intelligence technology offers an alternative to human readers. While artificial intelligence has been shown to be non-inferior versus human second readers, the minimum requirements needed (effectiveness, set-up costs, maintenance, etc) for such technology to be cost-effective in the NHS have not been evaluated. We developed a simulation model replicating NHS screening services to evaluate the potential value of the technology. Our results indicate that if non-inferiority is maintained, the use of artificial intelligence technology as a second reader is a viable and potentially cost-effective use of NHS resources.

Topics & Concepts

Computer scienceService (business)WorkforceProcess (computing)Breast cancerSet (abstract data type)MedicineRisk analysis (engineering)Artificial intelligenceBusinessCancerMarketingEconomicsEconomic growthInternal medicineProgramming languageOperating systemArtificial Intelligence in Healthcare and EducationAI in cancer detectionRadiomics and Machine Learning in Medical Imaging