Large language models (LLMs) are a rapidly evolving class of artificial intelligence with significant potential in clinical healthcare. Despite accelerating adoption, rigorous systematic evidence on clinical utility, patient safety, and implementation feasibility remains fragmented. To systematically review LLM applications across clinical domains, evaluate performance with appropriate contextual caveats, characterize implementation barriers, and identify ethical and regulatory considerations. Scientific databases were searched from January 2020 to January 2025. Studies evaluating transformer-based LLMs (≥10M parameters) in clinical settings were eligible. Data were independently double-extracted; quality was assessed using QUADAS-2, RE-AIM, and TRIPOD frameworks. Due to substantial heterogeneity across domains, narrative synthesis was conducted per SWiM guidelines; descriptive statistics are presented for the one sufficiently homogeneous domain (clinical documentation, domain-adapted models, n=12). Fifty-two studies were included. Domain-adapted models (ClinicalBERT, BioBERT, Llama-3-8B) outperformed general-purpose models (GPT-4, Med-PaLM 2) on structured, narrow tasks in benchmark settings (88–98% vs. 78–91% accuracy). These figures derive from curated datasets and should not be extrapolated to routine clinical environments. Across 34 studies reporting both benchmark and deployment data, real-world performance declined consistently (5–28% reduction). Hallucination rates were 5–12% for domain-adapted and 15–30% for general-purpose models in generative tasks. Key barriers included data privacy concerns (89%), absent regulatory frameworks (77%), and limited interpretability (83%). LLMs show promise in controlled settings, but evidence is dominated by retrospective evaluations on curated datasets and real-world performance is consistently lower. Responsible clinical integration requires addressing reliability, interpretability, privacy, regulatory readiness, and demographic equity.
KE Sharquie, AA Noaimi, AH Muhammad Ali, 2008 - Cited by 3
Accurate description of thermodynamic, structural, and electronic properties for bulk and surfaces of ceria (CeO2) necessitates the inclusion of the Hubbard parameter (U) in the density functional theory (DFT) calculations to precisely account for the strongly correlated 4f electrons. Such treatment is a daunting task when attempting to draw a potential energy surface for CeO2-catalyzed reaction. This is due to the inconsistent change in thermo-kinetics parameters of the reaction in reference to the variation in the U values. As an illustrative example, we investigate herein the discrepancy in activation and reaction energies for steps underlying the partial and full hydrogenation of acetylene over the CeO2(111) surface. Overall, we find th
... Show MorePeriodontitis is a persistent bacterial-causing disease which damages the supporting periodontium of the teeth. The complexity of supporting tissue structure makes the regeneration a challenge for periodontists. Early investigations were focused on discovering therapeutic substitutes that are biocompatible, simple to prepare and economic. This might cause a local release of growth factors that accelerate the healing process of the soft and hard tissue. Recently, platelet-rich fibrin (PRF) has received a wide attention as a biocompatible regenerative material in both dental and medical fields. PRF is a natural fibrin-derived biomaterial, and it is easy to obtain. It can be gotten from individual blood without the use of any external anticoag
... Show MoreReview of multidrug sensitivity and resistance in enterococcus
HTH Ahmed Dheyaa Al-Obaidi,", Ali Tarik Abdulwahid', Mustafa Najah Al-Obaidi", Abeer Mundher Ali', eNeurologicalSci, 2023
Leishmaniasis is a transmissible infection brought about by an obligatory intracellular protozoan from the genus Leishmania. It occurs worldwide in tropical and subtropical regions and can be burdensome in resource-constrained countries. The infection ranges in severity from mild cutaneous lesions to more severe and sometimes life-threatening visceral and distorting mucocutaneous sicknesses. Importantly, cutaneous leishmaniasis (CL) is prevalent in the Middle East with a pooled prevalence of 12%. It imposes a significant health and socioeconomic burden