Nature Communications (Jan 2024)

Autonomous artificial intelligence increases screening and follow-up for diabetic retinopathy in youth: the ACCESS randomized control trial

  • Risa M. Wolf,
  • Roomasa Channa,
  • T. Y. Alvin Liu,
  • Anum Zehra,
  • Lee Bromberger,
  • Dhruva Patel,
  • Ajaykarthik Ananthakrishnan,
  • Elizabeth A. Brown,
  • Laura Prichett,
  • Harold P. Lehmann,
  • Michael D. Abramoff

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1038/s41467-023-44676-z
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 15, no. 1
pp. 1 – 9

Abstract

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Abstract Diabetic retinopathy can be prevented with screening and early detection. We hypothesized that autonomous artificial intelligence (AI) diabetic eye exams at the point-of-care would increase diabetic eye exam completion rates in a racially and ethnically diverse youth population. AI for Children’s diabetiC Eye ExamS (NCT05131451) is a parallel randomized controlled trial that randomized youth (ages 8-21 years) with type 1 and type 2 diabetes to intervention (autonomous artificial intelligence diabetic eye exam at the point of care), or control (scripted eye care provider referral and education) in an academic pediatric diabetes center. The primary outcome was diabetic eye exam completion rate within 6 months. The secondary outcome was the proportion of participants who completed follow-through with an eye care provider if deemed appropriate. Diabetic eye exam completion rate was significantly higher (100%, 95%CI: 95.5%, 100%) in the intervention group (n = 81) than the control group (n = 83) (22%, 95%CI: 14.2%, 32.4%)(p < 0.001). In the intervention arm, 25/81 participants had an abnormal result, of whom 64% (16/25) completed follow-through with an eye care provider, compared to 22% in the control arm (p < 0.001). Autonomous AI increases diabetic eye exam completion rates in youth with diabetes.