xrai technology chest x-ray

XrAI

Harnessing the power of machine learning to help clinicians more easily identify lung abnormalities in chest X-rays.

Project Overview

Updated March 31, 2023

The Problem

In the fight against COVID-19, chest x-rays have been a critical tool for identifying lung abnormalities in patients, a critical complication from COVID-19. Chest x-rays can show the signs of COVID-19 infection in the lungs in multiple ways, such as partially collapsed lungs, blocked bronchial tubes and liquid collecting in the lungs or their outer lining. The information is key for family doctors, emergency doctors and nurses trying to determine if a patient could be infected.

The challenges faced by frontline teams trying to detect and treat COVID-19 include the time it takes to receive a formal report from a radiologist, along with the accurate identification of abnormalities in the lung. Often the treatment teams rely on their own interpretation of an x-ray to manage a patient while waiting for a radiologist’s report, if they have access to one. These interpretations drive clinical decisions, including the decision to admit or discharge a patient. A late or incorrect diagnosis could result in an infectious patient being sent home and a rapid deterioration of their health.

How We Are Solving It

XrAI is an AI-driven chest x-ray tool developed by Synthesis Health in close partnership with Canadian healthcare organizations and physicians. XrAI has been approved by Health Canada as a Class III medical device to support Canadian health providers in the fight against COVID-19. This software is ready to be deployed across Canada through the project team led by Synthesis Health in partnership with Saskatchewan Health, British Columbia’s Fraser Health, Vancouver Coastal Health and First Nations Health authorities, Ontario’s Trillium Health Partners, and Microsoft.

XrAI integrates seamlessly into existing clinical information systems. There are no interruptions to workflow and little to no training required upon installation. XrAI’s rapidly delivers AI-driven findings directly to clinicians’ standard x-ray viewer.

The technology already has proven successful. It has been tested on publicly available data of COVID-19 pneumonia and it correctly identified 100 per cent of the cases presenting abnormalities in the lungs. Furthermore, in a randomized control trial, the solution improved the accuracy of identifying other lung abnormalities across a variety of physician groups.

Chest x-rays are already performed in 35 per cent of visits to the ER – and COVID-19 is driving higher usage. By speeding up the analysis of the x-rays, XrAI will help reduce radiology bottlenecks and will be especially valuable for rural and remote ERs and doctors.

The Result

This project used artificial intelligence to identify lung abnormalities on chest x-rays in real-time, enabling clinicians on the frontline in emergency rooms and rural hospitals to better identify COVID-19 and other lung-related illnesses. In the hands of clinicians, this tool improves patient outcomes and save lives and has successfully integrated to provincial imaging systems, proving it can be integrated and available to clinicians at scale.

XrAI’s integration to provincial imaging systems to-date has proven its ability to be available to clinicians at scale. It has been deployed in an Ontario hospital system: serving one of the world’s most diverse communities of over 1 million residents from more than 55 different nationalities. As of the completion of this project, XrAI’s target of 100,000 images per health authority is well on its way to being exceeded, as Trillium Health Partners expanded their research study to over 480,000 chest x-ray images. It has been deployed in B.C. via Vancouver Coastal Health, serving over 1.25 million patients representing 25% of the province’s population. It has also been deployed in Saskatchewan, collectively serving more than 70% of the rural population of the province including 15 Indigenous and 31 Hutterite communities.

The project also developed an integrated mobile x-ray and a connectivity-light portable solution for usage in rural communities with minimal service infrastructure. These advancements led to ongoing discussions with Indigenous Services Canada and the First Nations Health Authority for further deployment in B.C., Alberta and Saskatchewan.

Project Lead

  • SynthesisHealth

Project Partners

  • first nations health authorityy@2x e1633486745745
  • fraserhealth@2x e1632889247174
  • Saskatchewan Health Authority
  • Trillium Health Partners
  • Vancouver Coastal Health
  • microsoft@2x e1632716841590

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