Dies ist eine Übersichtsseite mit Metadaten zu dieser wissenschaftlichen Arbeit. Der vollständige Artikel ist beim Verlag verfügbar.
Safety and efficacy of privacy-preserving models to create Lay summaries of brain MRI reports
0
Zitationen
8
Autoren
2026
Jahr
Abstract
Patient access to radiology reports has heightened the need for patient-friendly communication. Automated generation of patient-centered summaries using large language models (LLMs) is a promising solution. However, their use on real-life reports is limited by privacy concerns. Here, we evaluate the safety and effectiveness of on-premise, privacy-preserving LLMs for generating lay summaries of real French brain MRI reports for emergency presentations of headache. In this retrospective study, we sampled 105 brain MRI reports (January–December 2022) for radiologist evaluation and a subset of 30 reports for non-physician evaluation. Three open-weights models (Llama 3.3 70B, Athene V2, Mistral Small) generated French lay summaries via a single standardized prompt. Radiologists’ mean ratings across models were high for exactness (4.10, 95% CI: 4.04–4.16), exhaustiveness (4.34, 95% CI: 4.29–4.39), didacticness (3.83, 95% CI: 3.79–3.88), and readiness for clinical use (3.84, 95% CI: 3.79–3.89). Non-physicians reported higher perceived understanding with summaries, from 2.85 (95% CI: 2.67–3.04) to 4.27 (95% CI: 4.15–4.38, p < 0.001). The correct identification rate for reports increased from 75.2% to 83.6% (p < 0.001). The ability to identify causal findings also improved, from 80.6% to 84.8% (p < 0.001) overall. Overall error rate in LLM-generated lay summaries was 19.7% (62/315), warranting expert oversight.
Ähnliche Arbeiten
Refinement and reassessment of the SERVQUAL scale.
1991 · 3.966 Zit.
Features and uses of high-fidelity medical simulations that lead to effective learning: a BEME systematic review
2005 · 3.771 Zit.
Radiobiology for the Radiologist.
1974 · 3.501 Zit.
International evidence-based recommendations for point-of-care lung ultrasound
2012 · 2.814 Zit.
Radiation Dose Associated With Common Computed Tomography Examinations and the Associated Lifetime Attributable Risk of Cancer
2009 · 2.431 Zit.