Jan 9, 2026
WCO-IOF-ESCEO
Abstract
OSTEO
COST-EFFECTIVENESS OF AI-ENHANCED OPPORTUNISTIC OSTEOPOROSIS SCREENING USING CHEST RADIOGRAPHS: EVIDENCE FROM SIX INTERNATIONAL ANALYSES
Mickael Hiligsmann, M. Alokail, J.-Y. Reginster
M. Hiligsmann1, M. Alokail2, J.-Y. Reginster 2
1Maastricht University, Maastricht, Netherlands, 2King Saud University, Riyadh, Saudi Arabia
Introduction: AI-enhanced analysis of routinely acquired chest radiographs enables
opportunistic osteoporosis screening without additional imaging. While individual studies
suggest economic value, evidence comparing results across healthcare systems is limited.
This study summarizes findings from six international cost-effectiveness analyses of AI-
enhanced opportunistic osteoporosis screening.
Methods: We reviewed six country-specific studies, four published and two recently
submitted, comparing AI-enhanced chest radiograph screening with no screening. Models
used local data on fracture incidence, costs, follow-up pathways, and treatment patterns.
Outcomes included costs, quality-adjusted life years (QALYs), incremental cost-effectiveness
ratios (ICERs), and key drivers.
Results: AI-enhanced screening was cost-effective in all six settings (Germany, United
States, Japan, Korea, Singapore, Australia). ICERs ranged from dominance (cost-saving with
QALY gains) to US$72,085 per QALY gained. Dominance occurred in some settings, largely
where fracture incidence or fracture-related costs were higher. Lifetime fractures prevented
per 10,000 screened people ranged from 16 (Singapore) to 44 (Germany). One evaluation
(Korea) included both sexes and showed cost-effectiveness in men and women. Across
countries, results were most sensitive to fracture costs, medication prices, adherence, and
follow-up after osteoporosis is suspected.
Discussion: Across diverse healthcare systems, AI-enhanced opportunistic screening
consistently produced favorable economic outcomes, though the size of benefit varied.
Differences in epidemiology, treatment patterns, and cost structures limit direct
generalizability, highlighting the need for local analyses. Overall, these findings support AI-
enhanced opportunistic screening as a scalable and efficient strategy to reduce the global
burden of osteoporotic fractures.
Acknowledgement: Funded by an unrestricted educational grant from Promedius, Inc.


