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Accepted for/Published in: JMIR Perioperative Medicine

Date Submitted: Jul 27, 2025
Date Accepted: Mar 12, 2026

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

Physician Perspectives on ChatGPT-4o as a Patient Resource for Abdominal Cancer Surgeries: Cross-Sectional Survey

Lindsay CV, Shenoy DA, Martin AN, Clipper CL, Shah KN, Lidsky ME, Nussbaum DP, Snyderman R

Physician Perspectives on ChatGPT-4o as a Patient Resource for Abdominal Cancer Surgeries: Cross-Sectional Survey

JMIR Perioper Med 2026;9:e81374

DOI: 10.2196/81374

PMID: 42081743

Physician Perspectives on ChatGPT 4.o as a Patient Resource for Abdominal Cancer Surgeries: A Cross-Sectional Survey

  • Christina V. Lindsay; 
  • Devika A. Shenoy; 
  • Allison N. Martin; 
  • Christie L. Clipper; 
  • Kevin N. Shah; 
  • Michael E. Lidsky; 
  • Daniel P. Nussbaum; 
  • Ralph Snyderman

ABSTRACT

Background:

Artificial intelligence (AI) models are being increasingly integrated into clinical care. Moreover, the accessibility of open-AI resources makes them attractive to patients seeking clinical information. Little is known regarding the utility of large language models as patient resources for navigating major cancer diagnoses.

Objective:

This study evaluated the content, readability and safety of ChatGPT 4.o-generated responses to common perioperative queries about hepatic, pancreatic, and colon cancers.

Methods:

A 28-question survey was developed based on frequently asked surgical questions for select malignancies. Surgical oncologists rated ChatGPT 4.o-generated responses on a 5-point Likert Scale for accuracy, quality, and tangibility. Readability was assessed using the Flesch-Kincaid Reading Grade Level (FKRGL). Respondents provided free-text comments and reported comfort with patients using ChatGPT. Survey completion implied consent.

Results:

Seven attending surgical oncologists with a median of 7 years in practice completed the survey. Responses received mean scores of 3.5/5 for quality, 3.6/5 for accuracy, and 3.6/5 for tangibility. The responses had a median FKRGL score of 14.5. On post-hoc analysis for select questions, median FKRGL was 15.6, decreasing to 7.1 and 14.5 with prompting and rephrasing. Numerous inaccuracies and content gaps were reported, and approximately 43% of providers did not report feeling “comfortable” in having patients consult publicly available AI for medical information.

Conclusions:

This study provides cautionary, yet optimistic, findings regarding the value of open-source ChatGPT as a patient resource for abdominal malignancies. Providers should be prepared to effectively counsel patients concerning use of ChatGPT to mitigate minor inaccuracies and address readability challenges.


 Citation

Please cite as:

Lindsay CV, Shenoy DA, Martin AN, Clipper CL, Shah KN, Lidsky ME, Nussbaum DP, Snyderman R

Physician Perspectives on ChatGPT-4o as a Patient Resource for Abdominal Cancer Surgeries: Cross-Sectional Survey

JMIR Perioper Med 2026;9:e81374

DOI: 10.2196/81374

PMID: 42081743

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