AIRS-PC: Efficacy of Artificial Intelligence Retinopathy Screening in Primary Care
Project mission:
Departments of Ophthalmology and Visual Sciences and Family Medicine and Community Health at UMass Chan Medical School (UMass) are partnering to improve rates of screening for and detection of diabetic retinopathy by introducing a screening program within primary care practices, where most patients with diabetes get the majority of their care.
Partnership:
At UMass, a team from family medicine and ophthalmology has developed an efficient interface to
- securely obtain retinal images with a handheld camera,
- upload them to the electronic health record (Epic) and then to a cloud-based server for
- analysis and reporting of the screening assessment for review and,
- if necessary, referral to an eye care provider by the primary care physician.
This collaboration will resolve a longstanding substantial care gap in our patients, many of whom do not receive their recommended yearly eye exam.
Study goal:
The departments intend to assess the effect of primary care based screening in pilot sites as well as the sensitivity and specificity of the AEYE algorithm compared to optometrists or ophthalmologists. If the pilot analysis is favorable, the research team anticipates that this project will expand to a system-wide intervention in other family medicine and internal medicine practices, as well as the Diabetes Center of Excellence.
Related resources: