Clinical Research Directory
Browse clinical research sites, groups, and studies.
Artificial Intelligence-Based Computer-Aided Diagnosis of Prostate Cancer
Sponsor: The First Affiliated Hospital with Nanjing Medical University
Summary
One-fifth of all men will develop clinically significant prostate cancers (CsPC) in their lifetime. An estimated 268,490 new prostate cancer (PCa) cases and 34,500 deaths are expected in the United States during the year 2022, making PCa the second most common cause of cancer-related deaths in men. MRI with the Prostate Imaging Reporting and Data System (PI-RADS) is a current widely used communicative tool for both CsPC detection and guiding targeted prostate biopsy. The high level of expertise required for accurate interpretation and persistent inter-reader variability has limited consistency and it has hindered the widespread adoption of PI-RADS. Artificial intelligence (AI) shows a broad prospect for medical interpretation and triage in various challenging tasks , including the PCa detection and staging with MRI. While rapid technical advances are furthering the application of AI medical imaging, their implementation in clinical practice remains a major hurdle. Besides, the prospect of data-derived AI tool is to assist human experts rather than replace them, and whether AI can match or exceed the human experts is still a matter of debate. Therefore, despite strong potential, there is urgent need for research to better quantify the accuracy, generalizability and clinical applicability before the clinical use of an AI in a real-world clinical setting.
Official title: Safety and Accuracy of Artificial Intelligence-aided Precision MRI Assessment for the Optimization of Prostate Biopsy in Men With Suspicion of Prostate Cancer: a Multicenter Randomized Controlled Trial.
Key Details
Gender
MALE
Age Range
60 Years - 90 Years
Study Type
OBSERVATIONAL
Enrollment
2000
Start Date
2022-08-22
Completion Date
2026-08-22
Last Updated
2023-08-21
Healthy Volunteers
No
Interventions
the clinical use of artificial intelligence in the diagnosis of prostate cancer
Each study site will enroll consecutive eligible patients and randomize them to either (a) a group with human-based interpretation or (b) a group with human-artificial intelligence interactive interpretation, both of which are utilized as standards of care.
Locations (1)
Yu-Dong Zhang
Nanjing, China