To examine whether Natural Language Processing (NLP) using a state-of-the-art clinically based Large Language Model (LLM) could predict patient selection for Total Hip Arthroplasty (THA), across a range of routinely available clinical text sources. Data pre-processing and analyses were conducted according to the Ai to Revolutionise the patient Care pathway in Hip and Knee arthroplasty (ARCHERY) project protocol ( There were 3911, 1621 and 1503 patient text documents included from the sources of referral letters, radiology reports and clinic letters respectively. All letter sources displayed significant class imbalance, with only 15.8%, 24.9%, and 5.9% of patients linked to the respective text source documentation having undergone surgery. Untrained model performance was poor, with F1 scores (harmonic mean of precision and recall) of 0.02, 0.38 and 0.09 respectively. This did however improve with model training, with mean scores (range) of 0.39 (0.31–0.47), 0.57 (0.48–0.63) and 0.32 (0.28–0.39) across the 5 folds of cross-validation. Performance deteriorated on external validation across all three groups but remained highest for the radiology report cohort. Even with further training on a large cohort of routinely collected free-text data a clinical LLM fails to adequately perform clinical inference in NLP tasks regarding identification of those selected to undergo THA. This likely relates to the complexity and heterogeneity of free-text information and the way that patients are determined to be surgical candidates.
Radiographic assessment of acetabular fragment positioning during periacetabular osteotomy (PAO) is of paramount importance. Plain radiographic examination is time and resource intensive. Fluoroscopic based assessment is increasingly utilized but can introduce distortion. Our purpose was to determine the correlation of intraoperative fluoroscopy-based measurements with a fluoroscopic tool that corrects for distortion with postoperative plain-film measurements. We performed a prospective validation study on 32 PAO's (28 patients) performed by a single academic surgeon. Preoperative standing radiographs, intraoperative fluoroscopic images, and postoperative standing radiographs were evaluated with lateral center edge angle (LCEA), acetabular index (AI), posterior wall sign (PWS), and anterior center edge angle (ACEA). Intraoperative fluoroscopy was adjusted to account for pelvic inclination. The fluoroscopic GRID was utilized in all cases (Phantom MSK Hip Preservation, OrthoGrid LLC, Salt Lake City, UT). Intraoperative fluoroscopic measurements were compared to preoperative and postoperative standing radiographs at 6 weeks using linear regression applied in MINITAB.Introduction
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