Introduction

Low-back pain (LBP) is the leading cause of disability worldwide1 and is associated with annual economic costs up to AU $9.2 billion2 and US $102 billion3 in Australia and the United States of America, respectively. In addition to economic burden, multiple individual factors (e.g. loss of social identity4, distress5 and physical deconditioning6) contribute to pain intensity and disability in this population group7. Approximately 90% of people with LBP are classified as having ‘non-specific’ LBP, where no clear tissue cause of pain can be found8. However, we anticipate that people with non-specific LBP are not a homogeneous group, yet the challenge remains to identify potential sub-groups that could benefit from specific treatments to assist in reducing the burden of the condition9.

Artificial intelligence and machine learning (AI/ML) techniques have been used to improve the understanding, diagnosis and management of acute and chronic diseases10. Technological advancements, such as machine-learning algorithms, have led to an increased capacity to recognise patterns in data sets, and used successfully to classify individuals with liver disease and heart failure10,11 and have found some application more widely in pain research12. However, the utilisation of such techniques in LBP, to date, is limited. The primary aim of this work was to conduct a systematic review examining how machine-learning tools have been used in LBP.

A classification approach or assessment tool that is implemented in clinical practice should have utility: be it for the patient (e.g. improved outcomes) and/or for the healthcare system (e.g. reduced costs). Any classification tool should ideally be (a) reliable, (b) valid, (c) detect people who are likely to have a different outcome or prognosis and (d) its implementation in clinical practice should improve patient outcomes, reduce healthcare costs and reduce the burden of disease13,14,15. To illustrate the current status, and potential future direction, of AI/ML approaches to LBP, we contrasted this to two commonly implemented clinical classification approaches (McKenzie16 and STarT Back13). The McKenzie method has been extensively studied in randomised clinical trials (RCTs) and subsequent meta-analyses of LBP treatment17, while the STarT Back tool is currently recommended in national guidelines18. McKenzie is a classification method of diagnosing movement preferences (e.g. spinal extension versus flexion) based on symptom response (e.g. centralisation versus peripheralization of symptoms)16, while the STarT Back classifies people in to low-, medium- and high-risk of developing persistent disabling symptoms based on physical and psychosocial factors13. A comparison of AI/ML utilisation to these existing clinical classification approaches can guide future work in sub-classification of LBP using AI/ML, specifically allowing for the development of a more robust tool that has the potential to impact the burden of disease of LBP. Therefore, (a) the primary aim was to systematically review the literature on AI/ML in LBP research, (b) while a secondary aim was to systematically review and contrast two common LBP classification approaches that are in active use in clinical practice (McKenzie and STarT Back) to how AI/ML tools have been used to date. To do this, we considered the reliability, validity, and prognostic capacity of these classification systems, as well as their impact on patient outcomes (e.g. pain intensity and disability) and healthcare costs, as determined in RCTs.

Results

Machine learning

Despite broad search terms, only 185 articles were identified after duplicate removal, with 64 assessed at the full-text stage (Fig. 1). The reasons for exclusion of AI/ML studies at the full-text stage are presented in Supplementary Table 1. A total of 48 studies were included in data extraction and qualitative synthesis (Fig. 1)19,20,21,22,23,24,25,26,27,28,29,30,31,32,33,34,35,36,37,38,39,40,41,42,43,44,45,46,47,48,49,50,51,52,53,54,55,56,57,58,59,60,61,62,63,64,65,66.

Fig. 1: Artificial intelligence PRISMA diagram.
figure 1

Flow of the systematic review of artificial intelligence/machine learning approaches in low-back pain research.

The overview of study characteristics and authors conclusions is presented in Table 1. Studies were split into case−control, cohort or other classifications. Overall, the sample sizes ranged from 10 to 34,589 people. The populations consisted of 16 studies that looked at chronic LBP19,20,24,28,29,31,36,37,39,42,54,55,56,57,62,64, two acute LBP27,30, one recurrent22, one lumbar spinal stenosis21, two surgical46,61, nine other (mixed samples)35,38,40,41,48,51,53,65,66 and 17 were unclear (LBP type not defined)23,25,26,32,33,34,43,44,45,47,49,50,52,58,59,60,63. Ten studies did not report training and testing of the data sets26,29,33,46,51,52,55,56,59,60.

Table 1 Overview of included studies on machine learning and LBP.

Classification of LBP was assessed in 25 studies, all of which attempted binary classification to detect the presence of LBP or not19,20,23,24,25,28,29,31,32,33,37,40,41,42,44,47,49,50,53,54,55,57,62,63,64. One study classified golfers with and without LBP based on electromyography and golf kinematic data using a support vector machine (multilayer perceptron with one layer, where input data are placed into vector spaces)12 with 100% accuracy47. Another study looked at classifying LBP based on the number of contacts with healthcare professionals with an accuracy of 91%34. Four studies23,32,40,41 classified LBP and controls based on electromyography, spinal positions and trunk range of motion. Sample sizes of these studies range from 98 to 1510. The accuracy of these studies for classifying LBP ranged from 83 to 92%. One study classified LBP in 160 industrial workers on personal, psychosocial and occupational factors using an artificial neural network (ANN; programs that operate with multiple processing elements or neurons to determine the strength of connections between nodes) with 92% accuracy25. The next largest study was one in 34,589 people and showed an ANN on lifestyle and psychosocial characteristics classified LBP with an area under the curve of 0.75. Eleven studies looked at the classification of individuals with chronic LBP19,20,24,28,29,37,42,54,57,62,64. The sample size of studies in chronic LBP classification ranged from 24 to 171 individuals19,20,24,28,29,37,42,54,57,62,64. Nine of these studies used input parameters that focused on electromyography and trunk motion data20,24,28,29,37,42,54,57,62. The accuracy of the machine-learning models for CLBP classification ranged from 70 to 100%19,20,24,28,29,37,42,54,57,62,64.

No studies have used AI/ML techniques to assess LBP prognosis of pre-defined sub-groups on pain and disability outcomes. However, nine studies assessed the prognosis of LBP based on input parameters21,22,27,30,31,46,51,52,59. Studies examined prognosis prediction using AI/ML techniques of: satisfaction after lumbar stenosis surgery21, recurrent lumbar disc herniation22, recovery from acute LBP27,30, recovery from CLBP31, poor outcomes following lumbar surgery46,51, successful outcomes from cognitive behavioural therapy52 and recovery based on pain chart measurements59. Sample sizes ranged from 71 to 4665 people. Six studies showed an accuracy of 61−98%21,22,27,31,51,52, while three did not report accuracy directly46,59,67. One study reported an area under the curve of 0.7530, while the other study reported a sensitivity and specificity of 88% and 86%, respectively46.

Four studies38,48,65,66 assessed the ability of AI/ML approaches to, using existing data sets, diagnose nerve root compression, ‘simple’ LBP, spinal pathology and abnormal illness behaviour in LBP. These models achieved an accuracy of 82% and 90%, respectively38,48,65,66. Two studies aimed to predict vertebral pathologies with an accuracy of 90−92%58,61. Lastly, one study used a decision support system for LBP diagnosis with an accuracy of 73%60.

No prospective clinical trials have been performed using AI/ML tools for LBP treatment allocation. However, two studies26,43 looked at treatment allocation pathways. One study looked at computer-assisted prediction of LBP treatment, but did not report any accuracy values nor clearly the number of treatment pathways26. The other study used 1288 fictional cases to train the data set and a training sample of 45 humans43. The highest accuracy for predicting appropriate treatment allocation reported was 72%43.

Five studies35,36,39,45,56 did not clearly fit the classification, diagnosis, prognosis or treatment allocation titles. Two studies assessed the prediction of pain intensity in LBP based on pain intensity and skin resistance45 and spinal motion data56. The use of sleep actigraphy to determine daytime pain was assessed in one study using an ANN36. Another was used to predict neural adaptions based on psychosocial constructs using a Multivariate Pattern analysis39. Lastly, one study assessed self-report and objective activity data to categorise acute and chronic LBP using an ANN35.

An overview of risk of bias from the NOS is shown in Table 2. Overall, 29 studies20,23,24,25,28,29,32,34,38,40,41,42,44,45,47,48,49,50,53,54,55,57,58,61,62,63,64,65,66 were case−control while eight21,22,27,30,31,37,46,52 were cohort studies. Eleven studies did not fit the criteria for case−control or cohort studies and did not undergo the risk of bias assessment19,26,33,35,36,39,43,51,56,59,60. Of the case−control studies, eight were considered ‘fair’ quality20,48,55,57,61,64,65,66, while the other 21 were ‘poor’ quality23,24,25,28,29,32,34,38,40,41,42,44,45,47,49,50,53,54,58,62,63. All eight cohort studies were considered as ‘fair’ quality21,22,27,30,31,37,46,52.

Table 2 Risk of bias assessment using the Newcastle-Ottowa Scale.

STarT Back tool

Overall, 46 studies were included within the STarT Back review (Supplementary Fig. 1)13,14,15,68,69,70,71,72,73,74,75,76,77,78,79,80,81,82,83,84,85,86,87,88,89,90,91,92,93,94,95,96,97,98,99,100,101,102,103,104,105,106,107,108,109,110. The reasons for exclusion of STarT Back studies at the full-text stage are presented in Supplementary Table 2.

Reliability and validity are summarised in Supplementary Table 3. Nine studies assessed the internal consistency of the tool, with a Cronbach’s α ranging from 0.51 to 0.93 (poor to strong)68,75,82,88,98,99,101,103,109. Only one study achieved an internal consistency above 0.9 (strong), which is recommended for use in individuals101. Nine studies also assessed the test−retest reliability of the STarT Back with the intraclass correlation coefficient and kappa values ranging from 0.65 to 0.93 (moderate to excellent)74,75,82,87,98,99,101,103,109. Construct validity was assessed in ten studies with correlation values ranging from 0.18 to 0.75 (weak to strong); however, most comparisons were of moderate strength68,71,74,75,79,82,87,98,103,109. Lastly, the discriminative validity was assessed in eight studies with the area under the curve ranging from 0.65 to 0.94 (poor to excellent)13,14,68,69,73,82,88,100.

For prognosis, STarT Back classification for improving pain or disability is shown in Supplementary Table 4. Of these, 17 studies assessed pain and disability prognosis with univariate models70,74,77,80,81,84,85,86,89,94,96,97,104,105,106,107,108. Of the univariate analyses, eight showed significant prognostic benefits for pain intensity74,83,85,89,93,97,106,107, 13 showed significant prognostic benefits for disability74,83,84,85,86,89,93,94,96,97,102,105,108, while two showed significant prognostic benefits on mixed pain intensity and disability analyses80,81. Of the multivariate models, two studies showed the STarT Back to predict prognosis for pain intensity adjusted for baseline pain90,91, while four showed no significant association71,72,78,93. Eight studies assessed prognosis for disability in multivariate models adjusted for baseline levels of disability with, six studies in favour71,72,83,90,93,102 and two against78,91 a significant association.

Four clinical trials assessed the STarT Back for classification and treatment allocation-compared outcomes to standard care (Supplementary Table 5)15,76,95,110. Of these, two were non-randomised trials, one which showed significant benefits of stratified care for pain and disability outcomes95, while the other only showed significant benefits for disability110. The two RCTs showed no significant effects of stratified care on pain intensity15,76, while one showed a significant effect for disability15. One RCT15 and one non-randomised trial110 assessed the cost effectiveness of stratified care when compared with standard care, with no significant differences observed.

McKenzie method

Overall, 29 studies were included within the McKenzie review (Supplementary Fig. 2)111,112,113,114,115,116,117,118,119,120,121,122,123,124,125,126,127,128,129,130,131,132,133,134,135,136,137,138,139. The reasons for exclusion of McKenzie studies at the full-text stage are presented in Supplementary Table 6.

Eight studies looked at the inter-tester reliability and classification ability of the McKenzie method (Supplementary Table 7)113,115,121,122,131,132,133,136. Overall, seven studies assessed the reliability with a Kappa value range of 0.02−1.00113,121,122,131,132,133,136. Only two of these studies had Kappa ranges >0.6; thus, five studies had poor to moderate agreement140. One study also showed that 31% of individuals were not able to be classified with the McKenzie method115. Validity of the McKenzie method as a classification system cannot be tested, as there is no gold standard comparator141.

Prognosis on pain intensity or disability based on McKenzie principles, such as directional preference, centralisation versus peripheralization and pain pattern classification, was assessed in 11 studies (Supplementary Table 8)114,117,120,124,128,130,134,135,137,138,139. The duration of follow-up of these studies ranged from 2 weeks to 1 year. Four studies reported the follow-up as when the patient was discharged; however, they did not provide a timeframe114,130,138,139. Three studies showed that classification was a significant predictor of pain intensity in univariate models114,135,139, while one did not117. No studies aimed to assess the classification on pain intensity in a multivariate model when adjusted for baseline values. For disability, five studies showed no significant benefit of classification on prognosis117,128,130,134,137, while five showed a significant effect114,120,124,138,139. Only two studies assessed disability prognosis within multivariate models, with one showing significant138 and one non-significant results137.

The search identified 11 clinical trials that used the McKenzie assessment and then provided treatment based on the individuals classification compared to another intervention or treatment (Supplementary Table 9)111,112,116,118,119,123,125,126,127,129,130. The comparators in the trials consisted of standard physiotherapy111, chiropractic treatment112, back-care booklet112, back school116, motor control exercise118,126, endurance exercises119, first-line care125, manual therapy127, general advice127, intensive strengthening129 and spinal manipulation therapy130. Five of 11 trials showed significant benefits for pain intensity, which favoured McKenzie treatment at the end of intervention111,112,119,123,125. For disability, four of 11 studies showed significant benefits favouring McKenzie treatment at the end of intervention111,116,119,123. Three studies111,123,125 assessed McKenzie compared to standard care, with all studies showing significant results favouring McKenzie for pain intensity and two for disability111,123. Three studies112,119,127 assessed McKenzie compared to advice or education, with two showing significant improvements in pain intensity112,119 and one in disability119, favouring McKenzie. Compared to passive treatments, such as manual therapy or mobilisations, three studies showed no significant differences for pain intensity and disability112,127,130. Three studies compared McKenzie to active treatments, with no significant results for pain intensity or disability observed118,126,129. One study compared McKenzie to Back School, with significant results favouring McKenzie for disability but not pain intensity116. One study assessed costs with no differences observed between McKenzie therapy and standard chiropractic treatment112.

Discussion

AI/ML are becoming more widely used in disease management and has potential to impact LBP treatment12. This systematic review assessed the current status of these approaches in the management LBP. In comparison to other classification approaches, applying methods of AI/ML for LBP is currently in its infancy. The results of our review show that machine-learning tools, such as ANNs and support vector machines, have attempted binary classification (presence of LBP or not), recovery prediction and treatment allocation in LBP. The accuracy of models included in this study ranged from 61 to 100%. However, there are several important limitations in existing AI/ML research.

Study sample sizes used for AI/ML-based LBP classification or prognosis were typically small for machine-learning approaches, with 23 of 48 studies having a sample size <100, 22 of 48 studies with a sample size between 100 and 1000 and only 3 of 48 studies with a sample size >1000. Additionally, 19 of 48 studies typically used a small range of parameters (≤5 factors). This may be a limitation, given most AI/ML studies of non-specific LBP aimed to classify individuals using only physical factors, such as trunk range of motion, electromyography and sitting posture20,23,24,28,29,32,37,40,41,42,54,57; omitting important psychosocial parameters that are known to be involved in patients with LBP. Only Darvishi et al.25 and Parsaeian et al.44 utilised a range of physical, psychological and social factors for the classification of LBP; however, they did not attempt sub-classification that delineate sub-groups that could benefit from specific treatments. LBP sub-classification is important as LBP, especially chronic (>12 weeks) LBP, is characterised by changes to a series of systems: biological, psychosocial and the central nervous systems and there are likely sub-groups within this population142. Notably, some studies applied many models to small CLBP data sets (n < 100) to yield highly accurate results; however, these were only focused on the binary classification, determining only the presence of CLBP20,24,28,29,42. In machine learning, normally, the sample size should be no less than 2k cases (where k is the number of features), with a preference of 5 × 2k 143. Therefore, these studies may be prone to overfitting of data and the best fit model is likely not applicable to other LBP samples144. Overall, 25 studies within this review assessed the role of machine learning on classification of individuals with LBP. To develop a robust sub-classification tool, various conditions such as reliability, validity, accuracy, ease of implementation, treatment allocation yielding clinically meaningful benefits and reductions in healthcare costs should be met145. The current evidence for the use of AI/ML highlights that the utility of these approaches is yet to be realised in a clinically meaningful way.

For comparison, we also conducted systematic reviews of two other classification systems for back pain: STarT Back tool (classifies people in to low-, medium- and high-risk of developing chronic pain based on physical and psychosocial factors)13 and the McKenzie method (diagnosing movement preferences; e.g. spinal extension versus flexion)16. The reliability (i.e. the consistency of the classification system over repeated attempts with the same patient)146 of the McKenzie method was poor to moderate113,115,121,122,131,132,133,136 and moderate to excellent for the STarT Back tool74,75,82,87,98,99,101,103,109. This limits the ability of the McKenzie method to be a useful classification system for people with LBP, as this impacts the ability to identify a movement or structure that benefits from a specific treatment141. Construct validity (i.e. degree of which the measure reflects what it is trying to attain)146 of the STarT Back tool ranged from weak to strong68,71,74,75,79,82,87,98,103,109 and discriminative validity (i.e. the ability to discriminate between various groups of individuals or sub-groups)146 was poor to excellent13,14,68,69,73,82,88,100. Three studies achieved poor discriminative validity for a singular subscale14,88,100, while all other values were above acceptable. Validity of the McKenzie method as a classification system has not and cannot be assessed, as there is no gold standard comparator141. Based on our findings from these two systematic reviews, if AI/ML is to make an impact on LBP management, it will likely need to develop greater reliability and validity compared to current approaches and advance sub-groups to improve clinical and societal outcomes through appropriate treatment allocation (Table 3).

Table 3 The process of development of (sub-)classification tools for LBP using AI/ML compared to the STarT Back and McKenzie.

In assessing the ability of a classification system to predict prognosis (i.e. the trajectory of a condition based on certain sub-group factors) of people with LBP, it is critical to account for the patients’ pain and disability when they are first assessed, as these factors are the strongest and most consistent predictors of pain and disability in the months after LBP incidence147,148,149,150. The STarT Back tool was typically (in six71,72,83,90,93,102 of eight78,91 studies and 2080 of 2634 patients) able to predict future disability, but this was less consistent for pain intensity (two90,91 of six71,72,78,93 studies and 348 of 1899 patients). For the McKenzie method, no studies assessed the effectiveness of the classification method on future pain intensity while accounting for baseline values. For disability, two studies of McKenzie assessed disability prognosis this within multivariate models, with results mixed (significant in one of two studies and 109 of 832 patients)137,138. The utility of the tool to effect overall improvements in patient outcomes has not been tested extensively for the STarT Back tool. One non-randomised trial showed significant benefits for pain intensity and disability when implementing the STarT Back compared to usual case (n = 582)95. Of the two RCTs, neither showed benefits of stratification on pain intensity (1324 patients); however, one showed significant improvement for disability compared to usual care (one of two studies and 568 of 1324 patients)15,76. The McKenzie method has been tested in 11 RCTs111,112,116,118,119,123,125,126,127,129,130, but in comparison to other active and passive treatment approaches is not more effective.

To build on current machine-learning approaches, research should investigate the ability to create sub-groups of individuals with LBP that considers a broader range of biopsychosocial factors, similar to that of the STarT back tool. The use of a broader range of clinical factors incorporated within an AI/ML approach using a large training data set may enable for more reliability, validity, prognostic capacity, and improved stratification of treatment for patients with LBP9. Such an approach may therefore lead to improved clinical outcomes for clients and reduced healthcare expenditure; however, this is yet to be determined. To date, only one study has aimed to employ this approach in LBP with a narrow set of physical factors43. Oude et al.43 used 1288 fictional cases to develop a model of self-referral in LBP, which was then applied to 45 real cases with a modest accuracy of 72%. Furthermore, the study did not assess if the model could lead to improved clinical outcomes and reduced healthcare costs43. A limitation of such approaches is that they fail to consider psychosocial and central nervous system factors that are associated with the condition, such as kinesiophobia151, pain catastrophizing152, pain beliefs153, pain self-efficacy154, depression5, anxiety5, occupational factors155, sensory changes156 and structural and functional changes to the brain157,158. Including these factors may allow for specific sub-groups to be identified that could benefit from targeted treatments to maximise clinical benefits. Future models that aim to classify treatment approaches need to consider these broader psychosocial and behavioural factors to enhance accuracy and clinical utility of the model.

The strengths of the current study include the use of broad search terms to identify all the relevant literature pertaining to the use of artificial intelligence in LBP. Even with these terms, we were only able to identify 185 articles for title/abstract screening. Furthermore, we completed two additional systematic reviews to contrast how machine learning could build on current classification approaches in LBP. For limitations, for clinical trials, due to the low number of studies and heterogeneity between studies, meta-analysis could not be performed. Furthermore, we considered the overall interaction of STarT Back classification tool (e.g. combination of all groups) when assessing the effectiveness for the intervention on pain, disability and costs. Some groups may have had significant effects, while others did not15. However, it is important to determine if we can develop a tool where all sub-groups benefit from specific treatments. Overall, we provide a clear summary of what the benefits of McKenzie and STarT Back could be.

Machine learning has the potential to improve the management of LBP via sub-classification of an otherwise homogenous diagnosis such as non-specific LBP. Identifying relevant sub-groups among patients with LBP would permit the determination of diagnostic categories that inform clinical decision-making and treatment choice. This systematic review found that current machine-learning approaches are reported to have high accuracy; however, they are often applied to small data sets with multiple models. To determine the utility of such approaches in future research, studies implementing machine learning in LBP need to examine larger sample sizes, examine a variety of known risk factors across multiple domains (e.g. spinal tissue, psychosocial and central nervous system) in each model and attempt sub-classification through data clustering within the model. The classification approaches need to be reliable, robust, evaluated, detect sub-groups with different prognosis and inform allocation of patients to treatment such that patient outcomes and/or healthcare costs are, overall, improved. Ultimately, this kind of approach to sub-classification has the potential to drive improvements in the global health-related burden of disease.

Methods

Search strategy

These systematic reviews were prospectively registered with PROSPERO prior to beginning data extraction (as registration numbers are still pending, protocols were uploaded to the Open Science Framework: AI/ML https://osf.io/a8nzt/; STarT Back and McKenzie https://osf.io/ztehm/). Six databases were searched till September 2019 with the following limits: MEDLINE (Nil), CINAHL (exclude MEDLINE), SPORTDiscus (Nil), EMBASE (exclude MEDLINE), PsycINFO and CENTRAL (exclude MEDLINE and EMBASE). For the machine-learning systematic review, IEEE Xplore (Nil) was also searched. Search strategy (1) included MeSH terms for ‘low-back pain’ AND ‘artificial intelligence’ (Supplementary Table 10), (2) searches included MeSH terms for ‘low back pain’ and ‘STarT Back Screen’ OR ‘STarT Back Tool’ (Supplementary Table 11) and (3) searches included MeSH terms for ‘low back pain’ and ‘McKenzie’ (Supplementary Table 12). Additional references were searched for through GoogleScholar. Two independent assessors screened the studies and extracted the data for machine learning (S.D.T. and D.L.B.), the STarT Back tool (S.D.T. and D.L.B.) and the McKenzie method (S.D.T. and X.Z.). All disagreements were addressed via an adjudicator (P.J.O.).

Inclusion and exclusion criteria

For inclusion, studies must have examined LBP and the utilisation of AI/ML techniques, the STarT Back or McKenzie method in humans. LBP was defined as pain localised below the costal margin and above the inferior gluteal folds159. No restrictions were included based on race, sex or age. Studies were required to be a full peer-reviewed journal or full conference publication (i.e. grey literature excluded). For AI/ML approaches in LBP, there was no restriction on study design, to ensure all research on this approach to date was identified. For STarT Back or McKenzie there was the inclusion criterion that the study must have examined: (a) reliability, (b) validity, (c) prognosis and/or (d) treatment effects (such as in a clinical trial). There was no restriction on study design as long as those topics were addressed. Exclusion criteria were: not peer reviewed or full conference abstract, not English language, not low-back pain, not AI/ML or STarT Back or McKenzie classification (e.g. if not clear individuals were assessed and treated via their profile) and not original research. AI/ML studies that did not evaluate the role of AI/ML in patient classification, prognosis or treatment (e.g. automated radiographic image analysis, automated pain diagram analysis) were excluded.

Data extraction

Data extracted included relevant publication information (i.e. author, title, year, journal), study design (e.g. cross sectional), study overview (free text), number of participants, type of LBP (e.g. acute, subacute, chronic, unclear) and summary of authors’ conclusions (free text). For AI/ML articles further extraction acquired the AI/ML techniques implemented, parameters used as inputs, whether data were split into training and testing data sets and the main results (e.g. the highest sensitivity, specificity, accuracy and area under the curve that are available). For both the STarT Back and McKenzie reviews, additional data were extracted for reliability, validity, prognosis and treatment effects from sub-classification (e.g. significant improvements to pain intensity, disability and healthcare costs). When it was not possible to extract the required data, this information was requested from the authors a minimum of three times over a 4-week period. Any discrepancies were discussed by the two independent assessors with disagreements addressed via an adjudicator (P.J.O.).

Definitions used in the systematic review

For studies of AI/ML in LBP, we considered the following categories of classification, sub-classification, prognosis, diagnosis and treatment allocation. Classification was considered as the ability to discriminate individuals with LBP from healthy populations, while sub-classification was defined as the ability to sub-group individuals with LBP based on different clinical characteristics (e.g. anatomical, psychological and nervous system alterations)145. Prognosis was considered the ability of clinical variables or an assessed sub-group to predict recovery or non-recovery (i.e. clinical course) of pain intensity or disability from LBP160. Diagnosis was defined as the ability to determine the cause of LBP, which could be based on anatomical, psychological and nervous system factors161. Treatment allocation was determined to be the prediction of a type of treatment that could benefit a certain individual with LBP162. Studies that did not clearly fit in these definitions were classed as ‘other’ studies.

Cut-offs for reliability and validity

Internal consistency (i.e. the degree of which components of a measure are related) was considered acceptable if Cronbach’s α values ranged from 0.7 to 0.9, while values ≥0.9 were considered strong146. Test−retest (i.e. the consistency of the classification system over repeated attempts with the same patient) was considered as acceptable above an intraclass correlation coefficient (ICC) of ≥0.7, whereas values ≥0.9 are considered acceptable for individuals; therefore, we considered these values as strong146,163. When Kappa scores for intra-rater (i.e. agreement of repeated measurements on the same patient) or inter-tester (i.e. the agreement of measurements between different clinicians) reliability were available, values were considered as poor agreement (0−0.2), slight agreement (0.21−0.40), moderate agreement (0.41−0.6), good agreement (0.61−0.8) and excellent agreement (0.81−1)122. As recommended for disability research, construct validity correlations (i.e. degree of which the measure reflects what it is trying to attain)146 above 0.6 were considered as strong, 0.3−0.6 as moderate, and below 0.3 as weak146,164. Discriminative validity (i.e. the ability to discriminate between various groups of individuals or sub-groups)146 followed principles set by Hill et al.13 for the STarT Back with an area under the curve of 0.7−<0.8 indicating acceptable discrimination, 0.8−<0.9 indicating excellent discrimination and ≥0.9 indicating outstanding discrimination.

Risk of bias

Risk of bias was assessed by the Newcastle−Ottawa Scale (NOS: http://www.ohri.ca/programs/clinical_epidemiology/oxford.asp), which is recommended for quality assessment of case−control and cohort studies by the Cochrane Collaboration group165. The NOS is split into selection, comparability and ascertainment of exposure/outcome categories, with a maximum score of nine points awarded. Based on this, studies were determined to be good, fair or poor quality as previously determined165. The methodological quality was determined by two independent reviewers (S.D.T. and D.L.B.). Results were compared with disagreements discussed to reach a verdict, with adjudication by P.J.O. if necessary.