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Accepted for/Published in: Journal of Medical Internet Research

Date Submitted: Jul 26, 2025
Date Accepted: Dec 24, 2025

The final, peer-reviewed published version of this preprint can be found here:

Impact of GPT-4–Generated Discharge Letters on Patients’ Medical Comprehension: Prospective Crossover Study

Holderried F, Sonanini A, Stegemann–Philipps C, Herrmann–Werner A, Spitzer P, Guthoff M, Heyne N, Sering K, Holderried M, Eisinger F

Impact of GPT-4–Generated Discharge Letters on Patients’ Medical Comprehension: Prospective Crossover Study

J Med Internet Res 2026;28:e81243

DOI: 10.2196/81243

PMID: 41746691

PMCID: 12982961

From Information to Understanding: Impact of GPT-4–Generated Discharge Letters on Patients’ Medical Comprehension - A Prospective, Crossover Study

  • Friederike Holderried; 
  • Alessandra Sonanini; 
  • Christian Stegemann–Philipps; 
  • Anne Herrmann–Werner; 
  • Philipp Spitzer; 
  • Martina Guthoff; 
  • Nils Heyne; 
  • Konstantin Sering; 
  • Martin Holderried; 
  • Felix Eisinger

ABSTRACT

Background:

Patients frequently struggle to understand standard discharge letters, posing a potential risk for patient safety through medication errors and misunderstandings. AI tools that generate patient-centred versions could help bridge this gap. However, evidence for their effectiveness remains limited.

Objective:

This study examines the impact of GPT-4-generated patient letters on patients’ retention and understanding of safety-relevant medical information compared with conventional discharge letters.

Methods:

48 trained standardized patients participated in this observatory, prospective crossover study. Each participant received one discharge letter for the assigned disease (out of three) and its matching GPT-4-generated patient letter. Participants read one version first, identified the 24 pre-defined safety-relevant “learning objectives,” then—after crossover—repeated the task with the alternate version. Primary outcome was the proportion of learning objectives fully, partially, or not reported. Secondary analyses stratified results by content field (Medication, Organization, Prevention of Complications, Lifestyle/Disease Management) and Bloom’s taxonomy level (“Remember,” “Understand”).

Results:

The letter type significantly influenced comprehension, with patient letters leading to higher rates of fully (490/1152, 42.5 % vs. 418/1152, 36.3 %) or partially stated (327/1152, 28.4 % vs. 291/1152, 25.3 %) learning objectives and fewer omissions (335/1152, 29.1 % vs. 443/1152, 38.5 %, P<.001). Participants performed better on “Remember” than “Understand” objectives, regardless of letter type (P<.001), though patient letters consistently improved results across both categories (“Remember”: 278/576, 48.3 % vs. 244/576, 42.4 %, “Understand”: 212/576, 36.8 % vs. 174//576, 30.2 % fully stated). The benefit of patient letters varied by content field (P<.01), with the greatest improvements in “Medication” (170/254, 66.9 % vs. 129/254, 50.8 % fully stated) and “Organization” (78/158, 49.4 % vs. /158, 62/158, 39.2 % fully stated). Gains in “Prevention of Complications” and “Lifestyle/Disease Management” were minimal. Nearly one-third of key information remained unrecognized across conditions.

Conclusions:

GPT-4-generated patient letters enhanced comprehension of safety-relevant information, especially for medication and organisational details, but did not fully address higher-order understanding such as risk prevention or lifestyle change. Multimodal, interactive supports will be needed to close these residual gaps in patient education and safety.


 Citation

Please cite as:

Holderried F, Sonanini A, Stegemann–Philipps C, Herrmann–Werner A, Spitzer P, Guthoff M, Heyne N, Sering K, Holderried M, Eisinger F

Impact of GPT-4–Generated Discharge Letters on Patients’ Medical Comprehension: Prospective Crossover Study

J Med Internet Res 2026;28:e81243

DOI: 10.2196/81243

PMID: 41746691

PMCID: 12982961

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