STAT+: FDA gives generative AI in radiology two breakthrough designation nods
Why this matters: health reporting relevant to everyday decisions and well-being.
The Food and Drug Administration has granted breakthrough designation to two devices that use generative AI to interpret chest X-rays and draft the radiology reports typically written by human radiologists. Machine learning systems have long analyzed images like X-rays and CT scans. But more recently, large vision language models have ushered in a new capability. Instead of highlighting a spot for a radiologist to review and write up, generative AI can process the entire image and draft many of its findings for a radiologist to review — a technological advancement that is challenging traditional validation and regulatory frameworks.  In March, one breakthrough designation went to Cognita, a Stanford researcher-founded startup acquired late last year by the large radiology practice Radiology Partners. Radiology AI company Aidoc announced its own breakthrough designation Thursday for a tool called First Read, specifically when it is used to detect and describe four life-threatening findings. Continue to STAT+ to read the full story…