?:abstract
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Objectives: Ali-M3, an artificial intelligence, analyses chest computed tomography (CT) and detects the likelihood of coronavirus disease (COVID-19) in the range of 0 to 1. It demonstrates excellent performance for the detection of COVID-19 patients with a sensitivity and specificity of 98.5 and 99.2%, respectively. However, Ali-M3 has not been externally validated. Our purpose is to evaluate the external validity of Ali-M3 using Japanese sequential sampling data. Methods: In this retrospective cohort study, COVID-19 infection probabilities were calculated using Ali-M3 in 617 symptomatic patients who underwent reverse transcription-polymerase chain reaction (RT-PCR) tests and chest CT for COVID-19 diagnosis at 11 Japanese tertiary care facilities, between January 1 and April 15, 2020. Results: Of 617 patients, 289 patients (46.8%) were RT-PCR-positive. The area under the curve (AUC) of Ali-M3 for predicting a COVID-19 diagnosis was 0.797 (95% confidence intervals [CI]: 0.762-0.833) and goodness-of-fit was P = 0.156. With a cut-off of probability of COVID-19 by Ali-M3 diagnosis set at 0.5, the sensitivity and specificity were 80.6% and 68.3%, respectively, while a cut-off of 0.2 yielded a sensitivity and specificity of 89.2% and 43.2%, respectively. Among 223 patients who required oxygen support, the AUC was 0.825 and sensitivity at a cut-off of 0.5 and 0.2 were 88.7% and 97.9%, respectively. Although the sensitivity was lower when the days from symptom onset were few, sensitivity increased for both cut-off values after 5 days. Conclusions: Ali-M3 was evaluated by external validation and shown to be useful to exclude a diagnosis of COVID-19.
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