PLOS Digital Health (Jan 2023)

Beyond high hopes: A scoping review of the 2019-2021 scientific discourse on machine learning in medical imaging.

  • Vasileios Nittas,
  • Paola Daniore,
  • Constantin Landers,
  • Felix Gille,
  • Julia Amann,
  • Shannon Hubbs,
  • Milo Alan Puhan,
  • Effy Vayena,
  • Alessandro Blasimme

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pdig.0000189
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 2, no. 1
p. e0000189

Abstract

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Machine learning has become a key driver of the digital health revolution. That comes with a fair share of high hopes and hype. We conducted a scoping review on machine learning in medical imaging, providing a comprehensive outlook of the field's potential, limitations, and future directions. Most reported strengths and promises included: improved (a) analytic power, (b) efficiency (c) decision making, and (d) equity. Most reported challenges included: (a) structural barriers and imaging heterogeneity, (b) scarcity of well-annotated, representative and interconnected imaging datasets (c) validity and performance limitations, including bias and equity issues, and (d) the still missing clinical integration. The boundaries between strengths and challenges, with cross-cutting ethical and regulatory implications, remain blurred. The literature emphasizes explainability and trustworthiness, with a largely missing discussion about the specific technical and regulatory challenges surrounding these concepts. Future trends are expected to shift towards multi-source models, combining imaging with an array of other data, in a more open access, and explainable manner.