From automation to agentic artificial intelligence in laboratory medicine: an opinion of the IFCC Division on Emerging Technologies.

Journal: Clinical chemistry and laboratory medicine
Published Date:

Abstract

Agentic artificial intelligence (AI) systems are distinguished by their ability to invoke multiple tools, compose command chains, and combine chain-of-thought reasoning with deep research to execute complex tasks and take actions. This represents a major evolution beyond machine learning and large language models (LLM), toward systems capable of planning, executing, and coordinating complex workflows. In contrast to traditional LLMs, which primarily focus on generating and classifying information, agentic AI introduces elements of autonomy, reasoning, and orchestration, while digital twins extend this concept to dynamic virtual representations of patients and laboratory processes, capable of continuous learning, simulation and adaptation. This transition has profound implications for laboratory medicine, a field characterized by high data complexity, multi-omics integration, and stringent operational demands. At the same time, laboratories face growing expectations regarding efficiency, resource stewardship, and value-based healthcare delivery. This article explores both the opportunities and limitations of agentic AI in laboratory medicine, highlighting its potential to move beyond static automation toward autonomous, outcome-driven innovation. It also examines the ethical, interpretability, and governance considerations that must accompany its implementation.

Authors

  • Damien Gruson
    Department of Laboratory Medicine, Cliniques Universitaires St-Luc and Université Catholique de Louvain, Brussels, Belgium.
  • Bernard Gouget
    President-Healthcare Division Committee, Comité Français d'accréditation (Cofrac), 75012 Paris, France; Emerging Technologies Division-MHBLM Committee, International Federation Clinical Chemistry and Laboratory Medicine (IFCC), Italy.
  • Woochang Lee
    IFCC Division on Emerging Technologies, Milan, Italy.
  • Ronda Greaves
    Biochemical Genetics, Victorian Clinical Genetics Services Ltd, Bundoora, VIC, Australia.
  • Yan Liu
    Department of Clinical Microbiology, Shanghai Tenth People's Hospital, School of Medicine, Tongji University, Shanghai, 200072, People's Republic of China.
  • Sven Ebert
    IFCC Division on Emerging Technologies, Milan, Italy.
  • He Sarina Yang
    Department of Pathology and Laboratory Medicine, Weill Cornell Medicine, New York, NY, USA.
  • Swarup Shah
    IFCC Division on Emerging Technologies, Milan, Italy.

Keywords

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