2020
DOI: 10.1007/s10928-020-09685-1
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Enabling pregnant women and their physicians to make informed medication decisions using artificial intelligence

Abstract: The role of artificial intelligence (AI) in healthcare for pregnant women. To assess the role of AI in women's health, discover gaps, and discuss the future of AI in maternal health. A systematic review of English articles using EMBASE, PubMed, and SCOPUS. Search terms included pregnancy and AI. Research articles and book chapters were included, while conference papers, editorials and notes were excluded from the review. Included papers focused on pregnancy and AI methods, and pertained to pharmacologic interv… Show more

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Cited by 39 publications
(26 citation statements)
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“…This is important as the hydroxychloroquine clinical trials for COVID-19 specifically exclude pregnant women from enrolling in their studies. Informatics methods can also be designed, which use more sophisticated machine learning and artificial intelligence methods to study the effects of medication exposure during pregnancy on fetal and maternal outcomes [15].…”
Section: Pharmacovigilance and Repurposing Existing Data For Covid-19mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…This is important as the hydroxychloroquine clinical trials for COVID-19 specifically exclude pregnant women from enrolling in their studies. Informatics methods can also be designed, which use more sophisticated machine learning and artificial intelligence methods to study the effects of medication exposure during pregnancy on fetal and maternal outcomes [15].…”
Section: Pharmacovigilance and Repurposing Existing Data For Covid-19mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Many reviews included data collected from electronic medical records, hospital information systems, or any databank that used individual patient data to create predictive models or evaluate collective patterns [12,13,[16][17][18][19][20][21][24][25][26][27]30,[33][34][35]37,38,40,[42][43][44][45]. Additionally, four reviews included primary studies based on imaging datasets and databanks, assessing different parameters of accuracy [15,29,31,36].…”
Section: Data Sources and Purposes Of Included Studiesmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Additionally, four reviews included primary studies based on imaging datasets and databanks, assessing different parameters of accuracy [15,29,31,36]. Other reviews focused on genetic databases [28,35], data from assisted reproductive technologies [30], or publicly available data [11,14,22,32]. Four studies lacked precision about the origin of the datasets used in their analysis or did not specifically use patient data in the investigation [23,37,39,41].…”
Section: Data Sources and Purposes Of Included Studiesmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…New AI approaches are a must in future research to clarify the maternal and fetal effects of opioid exposure. An AI for other facets of pregnancy, maternal and fetal wellbeing, including lactation, will advise the necessary research into the impact of pharmacologic on breastfeeding (Davidson and Boland, 2020). however, learns mainly from the observation of data.…”
Section: Future Of Ai and Women Healthmentioning
confidence: 99%