News | Coronavirus (COVID-19) | June 03, 2021

New tool uses AI technology to assess the severity of lung infections and inform treatment

Chest X-rays used in the COVID-Net study show differing infection extent and opacity in the lungs of COVID-19 patients. Image courtesy of University of Waterloo

Chest X-rays used in the COVID-Net study show differing infection extent and opacity in the lungs of COVID-19 patients. Image courtesy of University of Waterloo


June 3, 2021 — Artificial intelligence (AI) technology developed by researchers at the University of Waterloo is capable of assessing the severity of COVID-19 cases with a promising degree of accuracy.

A study, which is part of the COVID-Net open-source initiative launched more than a year ago, involved researchers from Waterloo and spin-off start-up company DarwinAI, as well as radiologists at the Stony Brook School of Medicine and the Montefiore Medical Center in New York.

Deep-learning AI was trained to analyze the extent and opacity of infection in the lungs of COVID-19 patients based on chest X-rays. Its scores were then compared to assessments of the same x-rays by expert radiologists.

For both extent and opacity, important indicators of the severity of infections, predictions made by the AI software were in good alignment with scores provided by the human experts.

Alexander Wong, a systems design engineering professor and co-founder of DarwinAI, said the technology could give doctors an important tool to help them manage cases.

"Assessing the severity of a patient with COVID-19 is a critical step in the clinical workflow for determining the best course of action for treatment and care, be it admitting the patient to ICU, giving a patient oxygen therapy, or putting a patient on a mechanical ventilator," Wong said.

"The promising results in this study show that artificial intelligence has a strong potential to be an effective tool for supporting frontline healthcare workers in their decisions and improving clinical efficiency, which is especially important given how much stress the ongoing pandemic has placed on healthcare systems around the world."

A paper on the research, Towards computer-aided severity assessment via deep neural networks for geographic and opacity extent scoring of SARS-CoV-2 chest X-rays, appears in the journal Scientific Reports.

For more information: www.uwaterloo.ca/

Find more RSNA COVID-19 resources

PHOTO GALLERY: How COVID-19 Appears on Medical Imaging

VIDEO: How to Image COVID-19 and Radiological Presentations of the Virus — Interview with Margarita Revzin, M.D.

Find more radiology related COVID news and video


Related Content

News | Bone Densitometry Systems

June 19, 2025 — Naitive Technologies has published results demonstrating the diagnostic performance of its AI-powered ...

Time June 18, 2025
arrow
News | Lung Imaging

June 18, 2025 — Exo recently announced that now included on its Exo Iris is the first ever FDA 510(k) cleared AI for ...

Time June 18, 2025
arrow
News | Imaging Software Development

June 12, 2025 — GE HealthCare has announced the combination of GE HealthCare’s proprietary features and algorithms with ...

Time June 12, 2025
arrow
News | Digital Pathology

June 11, 2025 — Diagnostic laboratory leaders view digital pathology and artificial intelligence (AI) as pivotal to ...

Time June 12, 2025
arrow
News | Lung Imaging

June 11, 2025 — To prepare healthcare workforces and providers for an AI-driven future, Qure.ai has expanded its Global ...

Time June 11, 2025
arrow
News | Radiology Imaging

June 10, 2025 — CIVIE has announced the official launch of RadPod, an AI-driven, on-demand radiology platform designed ...

Time June 10, 2025
arrow
News | Ultrasound Imaging

June 4, 2025 — RadNet, Inc., a provider of high-quality, cost-effective diagnostic imaging services and digital health ...

Time June 09, 2025
arrow
News | Mammography

June 9, 2025 — A new independent, peer-reviewed study published in the journal Clinical Breast Cancer reinforces the ...

Time June 09, 2025
arrow
News | Imaging Software Development

June 05, 2025 — Nano-X Imaging Ltd. has announced that its deep-learning medical imaging analytics subsidiary, Nanox AI ...

Time June 05, 2025
arrow
News | Prostate Cancer

June 5, 2025 – Artera, the developer of multimodal artificial intelligence (MMAI)-based prognostic and predictive cancer ...

Time June 05, 2025
arrow
Subscribe Now