OBJECTIVES: To measure the benefit-risk preferences of US adults with heart failure (HF) for artificial intelligence (AI)-assisted echocardiograms (echos) in non-conventional settings.
METHODS: Using an discrete-choice experiment (DCE), adults with HF chose between experimentally-designed pairs of hypothetical AI-assisted echos comprising four attributes with varying levels: site of administration (primary care office or home), risk of unusable images (5%, 20%, 45%, 60%), how results are interpreted (AI-based or cardiologist confirmation of AI-based), and risk of false-negative echo results (10%, 15%, 25%, 30%, 40%, 50%). Respondents could also prefer a standard echo (cardiologists’ office without AI). Choices were analyzed using random-parameters logit. Conditional relative attribute importance (CRAI) out of 100% and maximum acceptable risks were calculated.
RESULTS: The sample included 171 adults - 75 with physician-confirmed and 96 with self-reported HF diagnoses. On average, respondents had 2.7 echos during the prior 2 years. Most (89.5%) respondents were in New York Heart Association Class II or greater. On average, respondents preferred AI-assisted echos over standard echos. An AI-assisted echo’s risk of a false-negative had the greatest CRAI (64.1%), followed by its risk of unusable images (CRAI, 29.7%). Respondents preferred cardiologist confirmation of AI-based results to AI-based interpretation alone and preferred AI-assisted echos administered at home to those administered in a primary care setting, but these two attributes had low importance (CRAI 3.2% and 3.0%, respectively). For AI-assisted echos, respondents were willing to tolerate the following maximum risks in exchange for home-based rather than primary care-based echos: 12.5% risk of unusable images and 11.0% risk of false-negative results. Respondents would tolerate similar maximum risks in exchange for cardiologist confirmation of AI-based interpretation rather than AI-based interpretation alone (13.0% and 11.1%, respectively).
CONCLUSIONS: While respondents preferred AI-assisted to standard echos, image usability and false negatives were stronger choice drivers than setting or cardiologists’ interpretation.
Poulos C, Gebben D, Peay H, Saha A, Vaezy S, Pierce A, Pina I, Farb A, Moultrie R, Babalola O, Tarver ME. Benefit-risk preferences of patients for the use of artificial intelligence and ultrasound imaging in different settings in echocardiography. Poster presented at the ISPOR 2023 Conference; May 7, 2023. Boston, MA. [abstract] Value Health. 2023 Jun; 26(6 supplement):S349. doi: 10.1016/j.jval.2023.03.2378
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