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Abstract
Artificial intelligence (AI) models have shown high accuracy in health screening, but high accuracy may not guarantee cost-effectiveness. This study conducted a cost-effectiveness analysis of an AI model in a Chinese diabetic retinopathy (DR) screening program. The analysis considered 1100 different AI diagnostic performances (sensitivity/specificity pairs). Six scenarios were cost-saving and seven were cost-effective compared to the most accurate model. Cost-saving or cost-effective AI models needed a minimum sensitivity of 88.2% and specificity of 80.4%. Higher DR prevalence and willingness-to-pay levels required higher AI sensitivity for optimal cost-effectiveness. Urban regions and younger patients also needed higher sensitivity.
Publisher
npj Digital Medicine
Published On
Feb 21, 2024
Authors
Yueye Wang, Chi Liu, Wenyi Hu, Lixia Luo, Danli Shi, Jian Zhang, Qiuxia Yin, Lei Zhang, Xiaotong Han, Mingguang He
Tags
Artificial intelligence
diabetic retinopathy
cost-effectiveness
health screening
diagnostic performance
sensitivity
specificity
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