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AI-enabled medical devices are burgeoning, but many haven’t been tested in children

Dec 18, 2024

Medical devices include software to help interpret radiology images, wearable devices that monitor the heart and flag risks, and devices that analyze brain signals for potential seizure activity and intervene with electrical neurostimulation.The FDA has approved only a small minority of the AI-enabled devices for use in children — about 40 in 2023.

This mirrors pharmaceutical approvals for children, which have lagged behind those for adults. But more concerning, a new study in JAMA Pediatrics finds that only one in five devices approved for children actually incorporated pediatric data into their algorithms. AI performance is only as good as the data used in training and validation processes, explains study first author Ryan Brewster, MD, a pediatrician at Boston Children’s Hospital who evaluates health care technologies. If the data used to develop these systems are biased or not representative, that is going to affect the output.

Researchers led by Brewster and Florence Bourgeois, MD, MPH, of the Boston Children’s Computational Health Informatics Program, reviewed FDA approval documents for 876 devices incorporating AI, identified on the FDA’s website as of March 2024. Most devices (80 percent) were used for radiology, followed by cardiovascular and neurology devices.

Most of the FDA authorizations were specific to adults (33 percent) or made no reference to pediatric use (50 percent). Only 17 percent of devices were explicitly labeled for use in children. For these 149 devices, only 19 percent explicitly reported development using pediatric datasets. The rest were validated only with adult data (15 percent) or failed to report whether children were studied (66 percent).The findings raise the possibility that AI algorithms developed for adult patients could cause harm if inappropriately extended to children.

For example, a radiology device that screens head CTs and flags those of particular concern may not fit kids, whose anatomy or disease processes are different, says Bourgeois. Conditions may not be detected with the same specificity and sensitivity. Measuring adverse effects from these devices will require new approaches.Until then, she and Brewster are advocating for increased awareness around the use of adult AI-enabled devices in children. They recommend consulting the device’s documentation for details about validation and use of the devices in pediatric patients.

Source: https://answers.childrenshospital.org/ai-medical-devices-children/


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