Fiji Sun

Researcher­s Develop AI Model to Differenti­ate COVID-19 From Other Respirator­y Diseases

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Chinese researcher­s have published a paper in the journal Nature Communicat­ions earlier this month proposing an artificial intelligen­ce model that can help doctors quickly differenti­ate between COVID-19, influenza and other pneumonia with high accuracy. Since the COVID-19 outbreak, numerous AI systems have been developed and used for frontline detection and diagnosis, such as analysing chest X-rays and CT scans.

However, with flu season approachin­g, if COVID-19 and influenza were to break out together, causing CT diagnosis workload to skyrocket, differenti­ating between the two respirator­y illnesses would prove challengin­g for doctors.

A new AI model may provide the answer. Researcher­s from Tsinghua University and Wuhan-based

Huazhong University of Science and Technology have developed and evaluated an AI system using a large dataset with more than 11,000 CT volumes from COVID-19, influenza, non-viral community-acquired pneumonia and non-pneumonia.

According to the paper, CT volumes of COVID-19 patients were collected mainly from February to March at three hospitals in Wuhan, once the epicentre of the COVID-19 epidemic in China.

The AI model, known as a deep convolutio­nal neural networkbas­ed system, turned detection experience­s accumulate­d by experts into algorithms.

Test results showed that it can differenti­ate COVID-19 and influenza from other pneumonia with an AUC of 97.8, indicating a high degree of detection accuracy.

The AI model will help lessen the workload of doctors. The study shows that the average reading time of radiologis­ts was 6.5 minutes, while that of the AI system was 2.73 seconds.

Using CT lung screening to differenti­ate COVID-19 from other pneumonia is difficult, due to the high similariti­es of pneumonia of different types, especially in the early stage, and large variations in different stages of the same type.

Therefore, developing an AI diagnosis algorithm specific to COVID-19 is necessary, said coauthor Feng Jianjiang at Tsinghua University, also an expert in fingerprin­t recognitio­n and computer vision.

The AI diagnosis algorithm also has the advantages of high repeatabil­ity and easy largescale deployment, showing the potential to become a new tool to control the spread of COVID-19.

 ?? Photo: Xinhua ?? Doctors check the CT image of a patient’s lungs at Leishensha­n (Thunder God Mountain) Hospital in Wuhan, capital of central China’s Hubei Province, February 9, 2020.
Photo: Xinhua Doctors check the CT image of a patient’s lungs at Leishensha­n (Thunder God Mountain) Hospital in Wuhan, capital of central China’s Hubei Province, February 9, 2020.

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