Standardised Transparent Orthopaedic Reporting and Modelling for AI (STORM-AI)-Guidelines for reporting artificial intelligence studies in orthopaedics from the ESSKA AI Working Group
Journal article, 2026

Purpose The rapid growth of Artificial Intelligence (AI) in orthopaedic research has led to inconsistencies in study reporting, hindering evaluation and clinical translation. This initiative aimed to develop the STORM-AI (Standardised Transparent Orthopaedic Reporting and Modelling-AI) guidelines to enhance the transparency, completeness, and quality of reporting for AI studies in orthopaedics.Methods The ESSKA AI Working Group, a multinational and multidisciplinary team of experts, developed the STORM-AI guidelines through a multi-step consensus process. This involved a comprehensive review of existing AI reporting standards (e.g., CONSORT-AI, STARD-AI and TRIPOD), followed by iterative rounds of drafting, review, and refinement to incorporate orthopaedic-specific considerations.Results The consensus process resulted in the STORM-AI checklist and an accompanying Explanation and Elaboration (E&E) document. The guidelines provide specific reporting recommendations across all study sections, including study design, data characteristics, model development, performance metrics, ethical considerations and clinical workflow integration. Key areas of emphasis include rigorous validation, clear outcome definition, and error analysis within the orthopaedic context.Conclusion The STORM-AI guidelines provide a crucial framework for authors, reviewers, and journals to improve the evidence base for AI in orthopaedic care. Widespread adoption is anticipated to foster more robust, reproducible, and clinically valuable innovations, facilitating the responsible integration of AI into orthopaedics.Level of Evidence Level V.

guidelines

artificial intelligence

orthopaedics

reporting standards

machine learning

Author

Felix C. Oettl

University of Zürich

Balint Zsidai

University of Gothenburg

Yinan Yu

Chalmers, Computer Science and Engineering (Chalmers), Functional Programming

James Pruneski

Tripler Army Medical Center

Thomas Tischer

Malteser Waldkrankenhaus Erlangen

University of Rostock

Ayoosh Pareek

Hospital for Special Surgery - New York

Alberto Grassi

IRCCS Istituto Ortopedico Rizzoli, Bologna

Stefano Zaffagnini

IRCCS Istituto Ortopedico Rizzoli, Bologna

Michael T. Hirschmann

University of Basel

Canton Hospital Basel-Land

Kristian Samuelsson

University of Gothenburg

Journal of Experimental Orthopaedics

2197-1153 (eISSN)

Vol. 13 2 e70702

Subject Categories (SSIF 2025)

Orthopaedics

DOI

10.1002/jeo2.70702

More information

Latest update

4/21/2026