ChatGPT’s Limitations in Athlete ECG Interpretation: Evidence from a Multicenter Diagnostic Study
Articolo
Data di Pubblicazione:
2026
Abstract:
Background: Artificial intelligence (AI) has shown promise in the interpretation of electrocardiograms (ECGs) using signal-based deep learning models. In parallel, large language models (LLMs) have gained increasing visibility in clinical practice, including exploratory applications in ECG analysis. Whether a general-purpose LLM can meaningfully discriminate cardiovascular disease from athlete ECGs during PPS remains unknown. We aimed to evaluate the diagnostic performance of a general-purpose LLM for this task. Methods: In this multicentre diagnostic accuracy study, we evaluated a commercially available LLM (ChatGPT, version 5) in 2950 competitive athletes undergoing PPS. All athletes underwent resting 12-lead ECG, with second- and third-line investigations performed when clinically indicated. The reference outcome was confirmed cardiovascular disease after full diagnostic work-up (n = 450, 15.3%). For each ECG, the LLM generated a numeric score (0-100) representing the inferred likelihood of underlying disease using a standardized prompt and without task-specific fine-tuning. Discriminative performance was assessed using receiver operating characteristic (ROC) analysis. Misclassification patterns were analysed according to International ECG Criteria. Results: GPT-derived scores demonstrated a marked floor effect, with a median value of 0 (IQR 0-2) in both diseased and non-diseased athletes and substantial overlap between groups. The area under the ROC curve was 0.52 (95% CI 0.49-0.55), indicating performance close to random classification. At the Youden-derived threshold, 79% of athletes with confirmed disease were incorrectly classified as negative. False-negative cases were predominantly characterized by borderline ECG patterns (82%), and a substantial number of red-flag ECG abnormalities were also missed. Conclusions: In this PPS cohort, a general-purpose LLM used in a naïve configuration showed no clinically meaningful ability to discriminate between cardiovascular disease and athlete ECGs. Without task-specific training or domain adaptation, such models should not be used for diagnostic triage in athlete screening.
Tipologia CRIS:
1.1 Articolo in rivista
Keywords:
ChatGPT; ECG; artificial intelligence; athletes; sports cardiology
Elenco autori:
Palermi, Stefano; Vecchiato, Marco; Iacovone, Tommaso Remo; Anselmino, Matteo; Adorisio, Rachele; Biffi, Alessandro; Borrelli, Francesco; Brugin, Erica; Cantarutti, Nicoletta; Cavarretta, Elena; Cominacini, Mattia; Corsi, Marco; D'Ascenzi, Flavio; De Feo, Vittorio; Di Gioia, Giuseppe; Dorelli, Gianluigi; Foccardi, Giulia; Gallina, Sabina; Giangrandi, Silvia; Graziano, Francesca; Lodi, Elisa; Livio, Alberto; Maestrini, Viviana; Manfredi, Guglielmo Leonardo; Mansour, Davide; Modena, Maria Grazia; Neunhaeuserer, Daniel; Nigro, Antonia; Palermi, Andrea; Pellegrino, Alessio; Pelliccia, Antonio; Quattrini, Filippo Maria; Ricci, Fabrizio; Scarzella, Fiammetta; Squeo, Maria Rosaria; Tonelli, Riccardo; Zanardo, Emanuele; Zorzi, Alessandro; D'Ascenzo, Fabrizio; De Ferrari, Gaetano Maria; Saglietto, Andrea
Link alla scheda completa:
Pubblicato in: