2021
DOI: 10.1002/ajmg.a.62538
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Can artificial intelligence save medical genetics?

Abstract: Genetics and genomics is one of the most exciting and quickly evolving fields in medicine. Relatively recent genomic discoveries have

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Cited by 11 publications
(7 citation statements)
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“…Despite the rarity (and therefore lack of data availability) of many genetic conditions, neural networks have high potential in this area, due to both the ability to accurately categorize patients based on underlying molecular causes and the lack of trained experts throughout the world such that these tools could be highly valuable ( Solomon, 2021 ). This area provides a ripe opportunity for patients, clinicians, researchers, and others to collaborate for the good of the impacted community.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Despite the rarity (and therefore lack of data availability) of many genetic conditions, neural networks have high potential in this area, due to both the ability to accurately categorize patients based on underlying molecular causes and the lack of trained experts throughout the world such that these tools could be highly valuable ( Solomon, 2021 ). This area provides a ripe opportunity for patients, clinicians, researchers, and others to collaborate for the good of the impacted community.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…However, it is worth emphasizing that AI at present still has limited scope of use in clinical laboratory genomics due to continuously evolving genomic databases, a steady pace of discoveries of gene‐disease relationships, and limited deployment for providing education and information (Luca et al, 2023). Expert clinicians and laboratory geneticists will therefore need to carefully oversee the emerging use of AI in genomic medicine and help other professionals incorporate genomic information appropriately for clinical management of their patients (Solomon, 2022). It is also important to note the potential lost opportunity costs of delaying the use of AI, since that would hinder diagnosis and treatment for millions of individuals who need conclusive genetic testing results, even as the data that could provide answers are available and waiting to be analyzed.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…As with broad sequencing approaches, these tools may further democratize clinical genetics and genetic testing by putting knowledge at the fingertips of many clinicians. In many ways, genetic testing is ideally situated for support via artificial intelligence, as the field involves so many rare and esoteric conditions that any one clinician (even a geneticist) cannot possibly be expert in every disorder they will encounter [43][44][45]. However, robust implementation studies are needed to carefully examine the efficacy of these tools.…”
Section: The Rise Of Artificial Intelligencementioning
confidence: 99%