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- Yasutaka Yanagita, Daiki Yokokawa, Shun Uchida, Yu Li, Takanori Uehara, and Masatomi Ikusaka.
- Department of General Medicine, Chiba University Hospital, Chiba, Japan. y.yanagita@gmail.com.
- J Gen Intern Med. 2024 Sep 23.
BackgroundCreating clinical vignettes requires considerable effort. Recent developments in generative artificial intelligence (AI) for natural language processing have been remarkable and may allow for the easy and immediate creation of diverse clinical vignettes.ObjectiveIn this study, we evaluated the medical accuracy and grammatical correctness of AI-generated clinical vignettes in Japanese and verified their usefulness.MethodsClinical vignettes were created using the generative AI model GPT-4-0613. The input prompts for the clinical vignettes specified the following seven elements: (1) age, (2) sex, (3) chief complaint and time course since onset, (4) physical findings, (5) examination results, (6) diagnosis, and (7) treatment course. The list of diseases integrated into the vignettes was based on 202 cases considered in the management of diseases and symptoms in Japan's Primary Care Physicians Training Program. The clinical vignettes were evaluated for medical and Japanese-language accuracy by three physicians using a five-point scale. A total score of 13 points or above was defined as "sufficiently beneficial and immediately usable with minor revisions," a score between 10 and 12 points was defined as "partly insufficient and in need of modifications," and a score of 9 points or below was defined as "insufficient."ResultsRegarding medical accuracy, of the 202 clinical vignettes, 118 scored 13 points or above, 78 scored between 10 and 12 points, and 6 scored 9 points or below. Regarding Japanese-language accuracy, 142 vignettes scored 13 points or above, 56 scored between 10 and 12 points, and 4 scored 9 points or below. Overall, 97% (196/202) of vignettes were available with some modifications.ConclusionOverall, 97% of the clinical vignettes proved practically useful, based on confirmation and revision by Japanese medical physicians. Given the significant effort required by physicians to create vignettes without AI, using GPT is expected to greatly optimize this process.© 2024. The Author(s).
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