Artificial Intelligence Tool for Optimizing Eligibility Screening for Clinical Trials in a Large Community Cancer Center

Author:

Beck J. Thaddeus1,Rammage Melissa2,Jackson Gretchen P.2,Preininger Anita M.2,Dankwa-Mullan Irene2,Roebuck M. Christopher3,Torres Adam4,Holtzen Helen1,Coverdill Sadie E.2,Williamson M. Paul5,Chau Quincy5,Rhee Kyu2,Vinegra Michael5

Affiliation:

1. Research Department, Highlands Oncology Group, Fayetteville, AR

2. IBM Watson Health, IBM Corporation, Cambridge, MA

3. RxEconomics, Hunt Valley, MD

4. Highlands Oncology Group, Rogers, AR

5. US Oncology Medical, Novartis Pharmaceuticals Corporation, East Hanover, NJ

Abstract

PURPOSE Less than 5% of patients with cancer enroll in clinical trials, and 1 in 5 trials are stopped for poor accrual. We evaluated an automated clinical trial matching system that uses natural language processing to extract patient and trial characteristics from unstructured sources and machine learning to match patients to clinical trials. PATIENTS AND METHODS Medical records from 997 patients with breast cancer were assessed for trial eligibility at Highlands Oncology Group between May and August 2016. System and manual attribute extraction and eligibility determinations were compared using the percentage of agreement for 239 patients and 4 trials. Sensitivity and specificity of system-generated eligibility determinations were measured, and the time required for manual review and system-assisted eligibility determinations were compared. RESULTS Agreement between system and manual attribute extraction ranged from 64.3% to 94.0%. Agreement between system and manual eligibility determinations was 81%-96%. System eligibility determinations demonstrated specificities between 76% and 99%, with sensitivities between 91% and 95% for 3 trials and 46.7% for the 4th. Manual eligibility screening of 90 patients for 3 trials took 110 minutes; system-assisted eligibility determinations of the same patients for the same trials required 24 minutes. CONCLUSION In this study, the clinical trial matching system displayed a promising performance in screening patients with breast cancer for trial eligibility. System-assisted trial eligibility determinations were substantially faster than manual review, and the system reliably excluded ineligible patients for all trials and identified eligible patients for most trials.

Publisher

American Society of Clinical Oncology (ASCO)

Subject

General Medicine

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