Fine-tuned large language model for classifying CT-guided interventional radiology reports.

Authors

Yasaka K,Nishimura N,Fukushima T,Kubo T,Kiryu S,Abe O

Affiliations (2)

  • Department of Radiology, The University of Tokyo Hospital, Tokyo, Japan.
  • Department of Radiology, International University of Health and Welfare Narita Hospital, Chiba, Japan.

Abstract

BackgroundManual data curation was necessary to extract radiology reports due to the ambiguities of natural language.PurposeTo develop a fine-tuned large language model that classifies computed tomography (CT)-guided interventional radiology reports into technique categories and to compare its performance with that of the readers.Material and MethodsThis retrospective study included patients who underwent CT-guided interventional radiology between August 2008 and November 2024. Patients were chronologically assigned to the training (n = 1142; 646 men; mean age = 64.1 ± 15.7 years), validation (n = 131; 83 men; mean age = 66.1 ± 16.1 years), and test (n = 332; 196 men; mean age = 66.1 ± 14.8 years) datasets. In establishing a reference standard, reports were manually classified into categories 1 (drainage), 2 (lesion biopsy within fat or soft tissue density tissues), 3 (lung biopsy), and 4 (bone biopsy). The bi-directional encoder representation from the transformers model was fine-tuned with the training dataset, and the model with the best performance in the validation dataset was selected. The performance and required time for classification in the test dataset were compared between the best-performing model and the two readers.ResultsCategories 1/2/3/4 included 309/367/270/196, 30/42/40/19, and 75/124/78/55 patients for the training, validation, and test datasets, respectively. The model demonstrated an accuracy of 0.979 in the test dataset, which was significantly better than that of the readers (0.922-0.940) (<i>P</i> ≤0.012). The model classified reports within a 49.8-53.5-fold shorter time compared to readers.ConclusionThe fine-tuned large language model classified CT-guided interventional radiology reports into four categories demonstrating high accuracy within a remarkably short time.

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Journal Article

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