Litcius/Paper detail

A scoping review of human digital twins in healthcare applications and usage patterns

Brant Tudor, Ryan Shargo, Geoffrey Gray, Jamie L. Fierstein, Frederick H. Kuo, Robert L. Burton, Joyce T. Johnson, Brandi B. Scully, Alfred Asante‐Korang, Mohamed Rehman, Luis Ahumada

2025npj Digital Medicine32 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Digital twins have become increasingly popular across various industries as dynamic virtual models of physical systems. In healthcare, Human Digital Twins (HDTs) serve as virtual counterparts to patients. According to the National Academies of Sciences, Engineering, and Medicine (NASEM), a digital twin must be personalized, dynamically updated, and have predictive capabilities to-in the context of health care-inform clinical decision-making. This scoping review aims to assess the current state of HDTs in healthcare, examining whether the literature aligns with the NASEM definition and identifying trends. A systematic literature search was conducted, covering articles published from January 2017 to July 2024. Only 18 of the 149 included studies (12.08%) fully met the NASEM digital twin criteria. Digital shadows made up 9.4% of studies, general digital models comprised 10.07%, and virtual patient cohorts were another 10.07%. Only two studies mentioned verification, validation, and uncertainty quantification (VVUQ), a critical NASEM standard for model reliability.

Topics & Concepts

Context (archaeology)Digital healthComputer scienceHealth careDigital forensicsData scienceDigital dataComputer securityPoison controlObject (grammar)MedicineMEDLINEState (computer science)Digital evidenceThe InternetSystematic reviewInternet privacyVariety (cybernetics)Digital Transformation in IndustryBiomedical and Engineering EducationQuality and Safety in Healthcare