Reasoning Language Model for Personalized Lung Cancer Screening
By: Chuang Niu, Ge Wang
Potential Business Impact:
Helps doctors find lung cancer earlier and safer.
Accurate risk assessment in lung cancer screening is critical for enabling early cancer detection and minimizing unnecessary invasive procedures. The Lung CT Screening Reporting and Data System (Lung-RADS) has been widely used as the standard framework for patient management and follow-up. Nevertheless, Lung-RADS faces trade-offs between sensitivity and specificity, as it stratifies risk solely based on lung nodule characteristics without incorporating various risk factors. Here we propose a reasoning language model (RLM) to integrate radiology findings with longitudinal medical records for individualized lung cancer risk assessment. Through a systematic study including dataset construction and distillation, supervised fine-tuning, reinforcement learning, and comprehensive evaluation, our model makes significant improvements in risk prediction performance on datasets in the national lung screening trial. Notably, RLM can decompose the risk evaluation task into sub-components, analyze the contributions of diverse risk factors, and synthesize them into a final risk score computed using our data-driven system equation. Our approach improves both predictive accuracy and monitorability through the chain of thought reasoning process, thereby facilitating clinical translation into lung cancer screening.
Similar Papers
Cohort-Aware Agents for Individualized Lung Cancer Risk Prediction Using a Retrieval-Augmented Model Selection Framework
Machine Learning (CS)
Finds best lung cancer risk test for each person.
ChestX-Reasoner: Advancing Radiology Foundation Models with Reasoning through Step-by-Step Verification
Artificial Intelligence
Helps doctors diagnose illnesses from X-rays better.
Reasoning Visual Language Model for Chest X-Ray Analysis
CV and Pattern Recognition
Shows doctors how X-rays are read.