Uncontrolled bleeding is still the main cause of preventable death in war zones. Data from wars in Iraq, Afghanistan, and other places shows that quick diagnosis and treatment of bleeding could have saved 6% to 24% of soldiers who died on the battlefield. Bleeding is dangerous because it stops oxygen from reaching important organs, causing damage that can’t be reversed if not treated fast.
The average time a patient can survive severe bleeding is only two to three hours. This means there is a very short time to help. But on many battlefields, especially when evacuation and medical help are delayed, medics have trouble quickly and accurately deciding how serious the bleeding is.
Traditional triage methods rely a lot on the medic’s judgment and signs like heart rate and blood pressure. In fast, tough situations, there is a chance for errors or delays. This is where AI-powered tools can help by giving quick, data-based risk assessments to support medics’ decisions.
The APPRAISE Hemorrhage Risk Index (APPRAISE-HRI) system is a new step in treating combat injuries. It was developed over 20 years of clinical and technical work. This AI tool looks at real-time vital signs that come from wearable monitors via Bluetooth. It checks systolic and diastolic blood pressure plus heart rate, which are good signs of bleeding, and sorts patients into three risk groups: low, average, or high.
The AI uses supervised training and multivariate regression to find patterns in vital signs. The data for building the system came from about 2,688 trauma patients in different places like military ambulances and hospitals such as Massachusetts General Hospital. Later, an independent study tested the system on nearly 6,000 patients from nine sites to make sure it works well.
Because of this careful training and testing, the U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA) cleared APPRAISE-HRI as the first AI triage tool for assessing bleeding risk in trauma patients. The FDA considers it a tool to help medics understand the situation, not a device to make final diagnoses or treatment choices.
APPRAISE-HRI can give risk results within 10 minutes. This quick information helps medics in combat or tough places decide who needs care first, use medical supplies well, and possibly save lives from bleeding. Most deaths in combat happen before evacuation, so having reliable AI help during the early time after injury is important.
Dr. Jaques Reifman, Ph.D., led the research and called this one of the toughest projects. It involved many studies and close work with regulators. One big challenge was making sure vital sign data from rough battlefield equipment was reliable. They used strict quality control to solve this.
This AI tool does not replace a medic’s judgment but gives extra help to better understand who needs urgent care. It helps medics focus on controlling bleeding fast and deciding who to send for evacuation first.
Knowing how to fit AI tools like APPRAISE-HRI into existing medical work is key to using them well. Military health staff and hospital leaders need to make sure these tools work smoothly with current routines, communication, and information systems.
APPRAISE-HRI collects vital signs wirelessly from monitors worn by patients. This allows ongoing monitoring without adding work or confusion for the medics. The system then checks the data and shows risk levels on mobile devices with little manual work.
This means less typing, fewer mistakes, and faster communication for medical teams. IT staff must keep Bluetooth connections safe and steady, protect data, and ensure the system keeps working without problems.
Linking AI triage with electronic health records and communication tools in hospitals or military settings helps with record-keeping and team coordination. This is vital when medics, nurses, surgeons, and transport crews work together under pressure.
The FDA also pushed for strong cybersecurity to protect patient information and keep the system working well. This protects against failures that could threaten lives in military and medical use.
Investment in AI-Ready Infrastructure: Tools like APPRAISE-HRI need reliable wireless devices, mobile computers, and secure networks. Leaders must make sure the system can get data and process it without stopping.
Training and Protocol Development: Medical staff and medics need training on how to understand AI risk results and combine them with their own judgments. Procedures should change to include AI outputs in decisions about patient care.
Data Security and Compliance: Because patient data is sensitive, IT teams must follow rules like HIPAA and Department of Defense security standards, especially in military healthcare.
Operational Scalability: AI tools made for combat can also help civilian trauma centers and emergency medical services. Planning for larger use is important.
Leveraging Continuous Monitoring: The real-time data and AI analysis used by APPRAISE-HRI can be used for other types of patient monitoring too.
APPRAISE-HRI is part of a growing use of AI in trauma care. AI helps analyze data quickly to support medical decisions when tools like labs or imaging may not be available.
While FDA approval supports military and possibly civilian use, this kind of tool will impact many trauma care systems. As AI gets better with more data and improved models, it will get easier to find life-threatening problems fast.
By helping medics check patients and decide what to do quickly, AI tools like APPRAISE-HRI can lower preventable deaths not only in wars but also in cities and emergencies. This is a step toward updating trauma care and making it work better.
Research for APPRAISE-HRI got support from the Defense Health Program, Combat Casualty Care Research Program, Medical Materiel Development Activity, and the Henry M. Jackson Foundation. This work shows how public and private groups can work together and work with regulators to develop complex AI medical tools.
The U.S. Army Medical Research and Development Command is now looking at business partnerships to license APPRAISE-HRI for military and possibly civilian use. This could make AI-based bleeding risk tools available to more trauma care teams across the country.
The development and use of AI tools like APPRAISE-HRI show how technology can help trauma patients in combat and emergency care. These tools provide quick and objective risk assessments based on vital signs. They support medical teams in making fast and informed choices that can save lives.
Medical practice administrators and IT managers in the U.S. need to understand how these AI triage systems work, what is needed to run them, and how to include them in medical workflows. This will help prepare healthcare to work with technology as a partner to provide better trauma care.
APPRAISE-HRI, developed by the U.S. Army MRDC, is the first FDA-cleared AI-powered triage system designed to assess hemorrhage risk in trauma patients by analyzing vital signs like heart rate and blood pressure.
The APPRAISE-HRI app collects vital-sign data via Bluetooth from external monitors and uses AI to assign patients to three risk categories for hemorrhage, facilitating quicker assessment and treatment.
Over 90% of preventable deaths among combat casualties are due to uncontrolled bleeding, and timely diagnosis and treatment are critical within a narrow survival window.
The model primarily uses systolic and diastolic blood pressure and heart rate, identified through high-performance computing as the most relevant indicators for assessing hemorrhage risk.
Data were collected from 2,688 adult trauma patients across three independent studies involving hospitals and air medical services, with rigorous quality checks to ensure reliability.
A supervised training method using multivariate regression was employed, allowing the algorithm to calculate hemorrhage risk on a 0-to-1 scale, categorizing patients into low, average, and high-risk groups.
The FDA granted regulatory clearance, requiring a risk-benefit analysis to ensure that the app benefits military healthcare without significantly increasing risks of misinterpretation or errors.
The FDA emphasized that APPRAISE-HRI is meant for situational awareness rather than for diagnosing or directing treatment, highlighting its supportive role in clinical decision-making.
The development process highlighted the importance of integrating rigorous scientific standards and recognizing the role of risk assessment as a parallel scientific diligence.
APPRAISE-HRI exemplifies the growing trend of integrating AI into healthcare, particularly in emergency and trauma settings, enhancing early assessment and response to critical conditions.