Cost-effectiveness of Artificial Intelligence for Proximal Caries Detection

被引:66
作者
Schwendicke, F. [1 ]
Rossi, J. G. [1 ]
Goestemeyer, G. [2 ]
Elhennawy, K. [3 ]
Cantu, A. G. [1 ]
Gaudin, R. [4 ]
Chaurasia, A. [5 ]
Gehrung, S. [1 ]
Krois, J. [1 ]
机构
[1] Charite Univ Med Berlin, Dept Oral Diagnost Digital Hlth & Hlth Serv Res, Assmannshauser Str 4-6, D-14197 Berlin, Germany
[2] Charite Univ Med Berlin, Dept Operat & Prevent Dent, Berlin, Germany
[3] Charite Univ Med Berlin, Dept Orthodont Dentofacial Orthoped & Pedodont, Berlin, Germany
[4] Charite Univ Med Berlin, Dept Oral & Maxillofacial Surg, Berlin, Germany
[5] King Georges Med Univ, Dept Oral Med & Radiol, Lucknow, Uttar Pradesh, India
基金
英国科研创新办公室;
关键词
caries diagnosis; prevention; computer simulation; dental; decision making; economic evaluation; radiology; GENERAL DENTAL SERVICES; ROOT-CANAL TREATMENT; LESIONS; OUTCOMES; ENGLAND; CROWNS;
D O I
10.1177/0022034520972335
中图分类号
R78 [口腔科学];
学科分类号
1003 ;
摘要
Artificial intelligence (AI) can assist dentists in image assessment, for example, caries detection. The wider health and cost impact of employing AI for dental diagnostics has not yet been evaluated. We compared the cost-effectiveness of proximal caries detection on bitewing radiographs with versus without AI. U-Net, a fully convolutional neural network, had been trained, validated, and tested on 3,293, 252, and 141 bitewing radiographs, respectively, on which 4 experienced dentists had marked carious lesions (reference test). Lesions were stratified for initial lesions (E1/E2/D1, presumed noncavitated, receiving caries infiltration if detected) and advanced lesions (D2/D3, presumed cavitated, receiving restorative care if detected). A Markov model was used to simulate the consequences of true- and false-positive and true- and false-negative detections, as well as the subsequent decisions over the lifetime of patients. A German mixed-payers perspective was adopted. Our health outcome was tooth retention years. Costs were measured in 2020 euro. Monte-Carlo microsimulations and univariate and probabilistic sensitivity analyses were conducted. The incremental cost-effectiveness ratio (ICER) and the cost-effectiveness acceptability at different willingness-to-pay thresholds were quantified. AI showed an accuracy of 0.80; dentists' mean accuracy was significantly lower at 0.71 (minimum-maximum: 0.61-0.78, P < 0.05). AI was significantly more sensitive than dentists (0.75 vs. 0.36 [0.19-0.65]; P = 0.006), while its specificity was not significantly lower (0.83 vs. 0.91 [0.69-0.98]; P > 0.05). In the base-case scenario, AI was more effective (tooth retention for a mean 64 [2.5%-97.5%: 61-65] y) and less costly (298 [244-367] euro) than assessment without AI (62 [59-64] y; 322 [257-394] euro). The ICER was -13.9 euro/y (i.e., AI saved money at higher effectiveness). In the majority (>77%) of all cases, AI was less costly and more effective. Applying AI for caries detection is likely to be cost-effective, mainly as fewer lesions remain undetected. Notably, this cost-effectiveness requires dentists to manage detected early lesions nonrestoratively.
引用
收藏
页码:369 / 376
页数:8
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