Assessing the Accuracy and Reliability of AI-Generated Responses to Patient Questions Regarding Spine Surgery

Author:

Kasthuri Viknesh S.1ORCID,Glueck Jacob1ORCID,Pham Han1ORCID,Daher Mohammad2ORCID,Balmaceno-Criss Mariah12ORCID,McDonald Christopher L.2ORCID,Diebo Bassel G.12ORCID,Daniels Alan H.12ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Warren Alpert Medical School of Brown University, Providence, Rhode Island

2. Department of Orthopedic Surgery, Warren Alpert Medical School of Brown University, Providence, Rhode Island

Abstract

Background: In today’s digital age, patients increasingly rely on online search engines for medical information. The integration of large language models such as GPT-4 into search engines such as Bing raises concerns over the potential transmission of misinformation when patients search for information online regarding spine surgery. Methods: SearchResponse.io, a database that archives People Also Ask (PAA) data from Google, was utilized to determine the most popular patient questions regarding 4 specific spine surgery topics: anterior cervical discectomy and fusion, lumbar fusion, laminectomy, and spinal deformity. Bing’s responses to these questions, along with the cited sources, were recorded for analysis. Two fellowship-trained spine surgeons assessed the accuracy of the answers on a 6-point scale and the completeness of the answers on a 3-point scale. Inaccurate answers were re-queried 2 weeks later. Cited sources were categorized and evaluated against Journal of the American Medical Association (JAMA) benchmark criteria. Interrater reliability was measured with use of the kappa statistic. A linear regression analysis was utilized to explore the relationship between answer accuracy and the type of source, number of sources, and mean JAMA benchmark score. Results: Bing’s responses to 71 PAA questions were analyzed. The average completeness score was 2.03 (standard deviation [SD], 0.36), and the average accuracy score was 4.49 (SD, 1.10). Among the question topics, spinal deformity had the lowest mean completeness score. Re-querying the questions that initially had answers with low accuracy scores resulted in responses with improved accuracy. Among the cited sources, commercial sources were the most prevalent. The JAMA benchmark score across all sources averaged 2.63. Government sources had the highest mean benchmark score (3.30), whereas social media had the lowest (1.75). Conclusions: Bing’s answers were generally accurate and adequately complete, with incorrect responses rectified upon re-querying. The plurality of information was sourced from commercial websites. The type of source, number of sources, and mean JAMA benchmark score were not significantly correlated with answer accuracy. These findings underscore the importance of ongoing evaluation and improvement of large language models to ensure reliable and informative results for patients seeking information regarding spine surgery online amid the integration of these models in the search experience.

Publisher

Ovid Technologies (Wolters Kluwer Health)

Reference22 articles.

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