Estimating diagnostic uncertainty in artificial intelligence assisted pathology using conformal prediction.
Henrik OlssonKimmo KartasaloNita MulliqiMarco CapucciniPekka RuusuvuoriHemamali SamaratungaBrett DelahuntCecilia LindskogEmiel A M JanssenAnders Blilienull nullLars EgevadOla SpjuthMartin EklundPublished in: Nature communications (2022)
Unreliable predictions can occur when an artificial intelligence (AI) system is presented with data it has not been exposed to during training. We demonstrate the use of conformal prediction to detect unreliable predictions, using histopathological diagnosis and grading of prostate biopsies as example. We digitized 7788 prostate biopsies from 1192 men in the STHLM3 diagnostic study, used for training, and 3059 biopsies from 676 men used for testing. With conformal prediction, 1 in 794 (0.1%) predictions is incorrect for cancer diagnosis (compared to 14 errors [2%] without conformal prediction) while 175 (22%) of the predictions are flagged as unreliable when the AI-system is presented with new data from the same lab and scanner that it was trained on. Conformal prediction could with small samples (N = 49 for external scanner, N = 10 for external lab and scanner, and N = 12 for external lab, scanner and pathology assessment) detect systematic differences in external data leading to worse predictive performance. The AI-system with conformal prediction commits 3 (2%) errors for cancer detection in cases of atypical prostate tissue compared to 44 (25%) without conformal prediction, while the system flags 143 (80%) unreliable predictions. We conclude that conformal prediction can increase patient safety of AI-systems.
Keyphrases
- artificial intelligence
- big data
- patient safety
- machine learning
- deep learning
- prostate cancer
- papillary thyroid
- emergency department
- electronic health record
- computed tomography
- young adults
- benign prostatic hyperplasia
- squamous cell carcinoma
- middle aged
- image quality
- body composition
- ultrasound guided
- adverse drug
- high intensity
- virtual reality