Novel AI Guided Non-Expert Compression Ultrasound DVT Diagnostic Pathway May Reduce Vascular Laboratory Venous Testing <sup>†</sup>.
Authors
Affiliations (4)
Affiliations (4)
- Department of Vascular Surgery, Attikon Hospital, University of Athens, Greece. Electronic address: [email protected].
- Department of Radiology, Attikon Hospital, University of Athens, Greece.
- Department of Vascular Surgery, Attikon Hospital, University of Athens, Greece.
- NYU Langone Health, New York, USA.
Abstract
Ultrasonography and D-dimer testing are established modalities for evaluating potential lower extremity deep venous thrombosis (DVT). The ThinkSono Guidance system is an AI based software allowing non-ultrasound trained providers to perform compression ultrasounds for evaluation by remote interpreters. This study evaluates its clinical utilisation and potential reduction of venous duplexes and waiting times. Patients with suspected DVTs were prospectively recruited through the institution's emergency department. Patients underwent an AI guided two region proximal DVT compression examination by non-ultrasound trained providers using the ThinkSono Guidance system and D-dimer testing. Ultrasound images remotely reviewed by the on call radiologist were rated for diagnostic quality; all images of sufficient quality were assessed as either "Compressible/no proximal DVT" or "Inadequate imaging/possible DVT". All patients assessed as "compressible" with negative D-dimers were discharged. All other patients were sent for a venous duplex scan. Time to diagnosis, sensitivity, and specificity of ThinkSono Guidance against D-dimers and full duplex scans were calculated. Fifty three patients (average age 56 ± 18 years, 45% females) were scanned with ThinkSono Guidance by one of three non-ultrasound trained providers. All scans were of diagnostic quality. ThinkSono Guidance with radiologist review yielded 45 negative DVT diagnoses (85%). Seventeen of these with negative D-dimers were discharged (32%), 28 required duplex ultrasound testing per trial protocol (23 due to positive D-dimers, five due to unavailability of D-dimer). All of these duplexes were negative (100% sensitivity). Eight patients were suspected to have DVT by the reviewing radiologist, and duplex confirmed DVT in six patients (96% ThinkSono Guidance specificity, 36% D-dimer specificity). ThinkSono Guidance scans averaged 6.75 minutes for scan and review. The median time from scan initiation to review was 37.5 minutes. This suggests a significant proportion of patients with suspected DVT could safely avoid duplex ultrasound and D-dimer testing using the ThinkSono system, setting the basis for a novel AI assisted diagnostic pathway.