They found that appropriately formatting text, figures, and tables in the clinical guidelines allowed the LLM model to reason more easily over the data, and accuracy improved dramatically.
Shung and Mauro say these findings could apply to other guidelines and specialties.
“LLMs are only as good as the information they are trained on,” said Shung. “Using LLM-friendly versions of clinical guidelines could help us more quickly develop point-of-care tools that provide highly accurate and relevant information for clinicians.”
Ultimately, Shung and Mauro hope medical societies will create versions of LLM-friendly guidelines so LLMs can easily ingest the guidelines without the need for reformatting.
“Medical societies want their members to practice evidence-based medicine, which requires access to the best information at the right time for each patient,” said Shung. “By creating LLM-friendly clinical guidelines, medical societies can help us create LLM tools that are up-to-date, complete, and use reputable sources. Clinicians need to have confidence in the information to make the best decisions with the patient in front of them.”
Since forming one of the nation’s first sections of hepatology more than 75 years ago and then gastroenterology nearly 70 years ago, Yale School of Medicine’s Section of Digestive Diseases has had an enduring impact on research and clinical care in gastrointestinal and liver disorders. To learn more, visit Digestive Diseases.