Beyond traditional orthopaedic data analysis: AI, multimodal models and continuous monitoring
Journal article, 2025

Multimodal artificial intelligence (AI) has the potential to revolutionise healthcare by enabling the simultaneous processing and integration of various data types, including medical imaging, electronic health records, genomic information and real-time data. This review explores the current applications and future potential of multimodal AI across healthcare, with a particular focus on orthopaedic surgery. In presurgical planning, multimodal AI has demonstrated significant improvements in diagnostic accuracy and risk prediction, with studies reporting an Area under the receiving operator curve presenting good to excellent performance across various orthopaedic conditions. Intraoperative applications leverage advanced imaging and tracking technologies to enhance surgical precision, while postoperative care has been advanced through continuous patient monitoring and early detection of complications. Despite these advances, significant challenges remain in data integration, standardisation, and privacy protection. Technical solutions such as federated learning (allowing decentralisation of models) and edge computing (allowing data analysis to happen on site or closer to site instead of multipurpose datacenters) are being developed to address these concerns while maintaining compliance with regulatory frameworks. As this field continues to evolve, the integration of multimodal AI promises to advance personalised medicine, improve patient outcomes, and transform healthcare delivery through more comprehensive and nuanced analysis of patient data. Level of Evidence: Level V.

orthopaedic surgery

multimodal artificial intelligence

clinical decision support

artificial intelligence

personalised medicine

Author

Felix C. Oettl

University of Zürich

Hospital for Special Surgery - New York

Bálint Zsidai

University of Gothenburg

Sahlgrenska University Hospital

Jacob F. Oeding

Mayo Clinic Alix School of Medicine

University of Gothenburg

Michael T. Hirschmann

University of Basel

Canton Hospital Basel-Land

Robert Feldt

Chalmers, Computer Science and Engineering (Chalmers), Software Engineering (Chalmers)

Thomas Tischer

University of Rostock

Kristian Samuelsson

University of Gothenburg

Sahlgrenska University Hospital

Knee Surgery, Sports Traumatology, Arthroscopy

0942-2056 (ISSN) 1433-7347 (eISSN)

Vol. In Press

Subject Categories (SSIF 2025)

Computer Sciences

Orthopaedics

DOI

10.1002/ksa.12657

More information

Latest update

4/4/2025 8