Women Pay for AI to Boost Mammogram Findings
AI has shown great promise in mammography as a "second set of eyes" for radiologists providing decision support, risk prediction and other benefits. Despite its promise, AI is not yet reimbursed by insurance, which likely is slowing its adoption in the clinic. Some practices have elected to offer enhanced workflows enabled by AI at additional cost, much like what was done when digital breast tomosynthesis was originally deployed.
For the study, researchers investigated the impact of AI—including a safeguard review—as a self-pay option in screening mammography. A self-pay, AI-powered screening mammography program was offered to patients across 10 clinical practices, ranging from a few sites up to 64 sites at the largest practice. Women who enrolled had U.S. Food and Drug Administration-compliant AI software applied to their mammograms. An expert breast radiologist provided a third, safeguard review in cases where there was discordance between the first reviewer and the AI.
Out of the 747,604 women who underwent screening mammography over an initial 12-month period, the overall cancer detection rate was on average 43% higher for enrolled women than for unenrolled women. The pattern of a substantially higher cancer detection rate in enrolled women was observed at all 10 practices.
Further analysis attributed 21% of the increase in cancer detection to the AI program. The researchers credited the remaining 22% increase in detection to the fact that higher-risk patients chose to enroll more frequently.
"These data indicate that many women are eager to utilize AI to enhance their screening mammogram, and when AI is coupled with a safeguard review, more cancers are found," said study senior author
The recall rate—the rate at which women were called back for additional imaging—was 21% higher for enrolled versus unenrolled women. Relatedly, the positive predictive value for cancer was 15% higher for the enrolled women, indicating that each recall resulted in more cancer diagnoses in the enrolled population.
"This is the first report on results from a program that provides an AI-powered enhanced review that patients can elect to enroll in," said study lead author
In the future, the researchers hope to better quantify the benefit of the AI-driven safeguard review with prospective randomized controlled trials that would eliminate the self-selection bias and provide the highest level of evidence.
Co-authors are
Note: Copies of RSNA 2024 news releases and electronic images will be available online at RSNA.org/press24.
RSNA is an association of radiologists, radiation oncologists, medical physicists and related scientists promoting excellence in patient care and health care delivery through education, research and technologic innovation. The Society is based in
For patient-friendly information on breast cancer screening, visit RadiologyInfo.org.
View original content to download multimedia:https://www.prnewswire.com/news-releases/women-pay-for-ai-to-boost-mammogram-findings-302318076.html
SOURCE Radiological Society of North America (RSNA)
Serious News for Serious Traders! Try StreetInsider.com Premium Free!
You May Also Be Interested In
- Trilogy Metals Announces Publication of Federal and State Permitting Schedule for Arctic Project, Establishing Defined Timeline Toward a Record of Decision by September 2028
- TBX and Garmin Link Aircraft Maintenance and Flight Operations Through New flyGarmin® Integration
- Colossal's Super Mom Competition Raises More Than $5.6 Million; Kristi Foxen Named 2026 Winner
Create E-mail Alert Related Categories
PRNewswire, Press ReleasesSign up for StreetInsider Free!
Receive full access to all new and archived articles, unlimited portfolio tracking, e-mail alerts, custom newswires and RSS feeds - and more!



Tweet
Share