Using ChatGPT to write a literature review on autologous fat grafting. Academic Article uri icon

Overview

abstract

  • BACKGROUND: ChatGPT is a large language model (LLM) that has been proposed as a scientific writing tool, though its ethical use remains a highly debated topic within the academic community. This article defines the strengths and weaknesses of ChatGPT in writing a plastic surgery literature review and describes proper methodologies for optimizing GPT-generated output. METHODS: ChatGPT-4o was prompted to brainstorm topics for a literature review on plastic surgery. Autologous fat grafting was chosen and ChatGPT generated each section of the literature review with citations, which were subsequently evaluated for accuracy. The ability of medical professionals to discriminate between a ChatGPT-generated and published fat grafting abstract was assessed. RESULTS: ChatGPT successfully conceived and performed a literature review on autologous fat grafting. The model performed well in outline creation, article summarization, and editing content. It generated a professional review of fat grafting, though its claims were generalized, not completely factual, and lacked accurate citations. ChatGPT provided 21 citations, 5 of which correctly referenced a real article. Eight contained errors in their publication details, such as publication dates and author lists. The remaining 8 were unable to be found in PubMed (hallucinated). Medical professionals were unable to distinguish ChatGPT-generated material from a published abstract. CONCLUSIONS: With appropriate vigilance, ChatGPT may be cautiously used as a writing assistant throughout the literature review process; however, authors must verify all scientific claims and citations. ChatGPT's greatest limitation remains its tendency to hallucinate, which undermines the reliability of a generated manuscript and perpetuates inaccurate information.

publication date

  • April 17, 2025

Identity

Digital Object Identifier (DOI)

  • 10.1016/j.bjps.2025.04.015

PubMed ID

  • 40339455

Additional Document Info

volume

  • 105