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Population-specific calibration and validation of an open-source bone age AI.

Scientific reports

Authors: Sebastian Rassmann, Luka Abashishvili, Elene Melikidze, Anastasia Sukhiashvili, Megi Lartsuliani, Ivane Chkhaidze, Nino Tskhvediani, Tinatin Gordeziani, Ekaterine Kvaratskhelia, Nino Kheladze, Maia Rekhviashvili, Salome Rodonaia, Natia Sukhitashvili, Nata Urushadze, Peter Krawitz, Tinatin Tkemaladze, Behnam Javanmardi

Assessing skeletal maturity through bone age (BA) evaluation is crucial for monitoring children's growth and guiding treatments, such as hormonal therapy and orthopedic interventions. In recent years, artificial intelligence (AI) methods have been developed to automate BA assessment. However, bone growth patterns may vary by ancestry, and many AI models are trained on limited population datasets, raising concerns about their applicability to populations not included in the training process. To address this shortcoming for the case of the Georgian population, we retrospectively collected 381 pediatric hand X-rays and established a manual BA reference rating from seven local pediatric radiologists and endocrinologists. We then used a subset of 121 images to perform a sex-specific linear calibration of the open-source AI, Deeplasia, creating Deeplasia-GE. On the held-out test set (n = 260), the default version of Deeplasia achieved a mean absolute difference (MAD) of 6.57 months, which improved to 5.69 months after calibration. We observed that the default Deeplasia overestimates the BA in the Georgian cohort with a signed mean difference (SMD) of + 2.85 and + 5.35 months for females and males respectively, which after calibration is significantly reduced to -0.03 and + 0.58 months for females and males, respectively. We find that Deeplasia-GE has a smaller error than all the raters and, by design, Deeplasia-GE inherits the high test-retest reliability from Deeplasia. These findings suggest that Deeplasia-GE is a reliable AI-based BA assessment method for Georgian children.

© 2025. The Author(s).

PMID: 40987805

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