# Large Language Models for Cardiovascular Disease, Cancer, and Mental Disorders: A Review of Systematic Reviews

**Authors:** Andreas Triantafyllidis, Sofia Segkouli, Stelios Kokkas, Anastasios Alexiadis, Evdoxia Eirini Lithoxoidou, George Manias, Athos Antoniades, Konstantinos Votis, Dimitrios Tzovaras

PMC · DOI: 10.3390/healthcare14010045 · Healthcare · 2025-12-24

## TL;DR

This paper reviews how large language models are being used for chronic diseases like heart disease, cancer, and mental disorders, highlighting their potential and challenges in healthcare.

## Contribution

It is the first meta-review analyzing systematic reviews on LLMs for chronic diseases, identifying trends and challenges in their clinical application.

## Key findings

- Most LLM-based solutions focus on mental health, particularly depression detection and suicidal ideation.
- GPT-family models are most commonly used, followed by BERT variants, but methodological quality and data transparency are often lacking.
- Key challenges include inconsistent accuracy, bias, data privacy, and the need for human oversight in LLM deployment.

## Abstract

Background/Objective: The use of Large Language Models (LLMs) has recently gained significant interest from the research community toward the development and adoption of Generative Artificial Intelligence (GenAI) solutions for healthcare. The present work introduces the first meta-review (i.e., review of systematic reviews) in the field of LLMs for chronic diseases, focusing particularly on cardiovascular, cancer, and mental diseases, to identify their value in patient care, and challenges for their implementation and clinical application. Methods: A literature search in the bibliographic databases of PubMed and Scopus was conducted following the Preferred Reporting Items for Systematic Reviews and Meta-Analyses (PRISMA) guidelines, to identify systematic reviews incorporating LLMs. The original studies included in the reviews were synthesized according to their target disease, specific application, LLMs used, data sources, accuracy, and key outcomes. Results: The literature search identified 5 systematic reviews respecting our inclusion and exclusion criteria, which examined 81 unique LLM-based solutions. The highest percentage of the solutions targeted mental disease (86%), followed by cancer (7%) and cardiovascular disease (6%), implying a large research focus in mental health. Generative Pre-trained Transformer (GPT)-family models were used most frequently (~55%), followed by Bidirectional Encoder Representations from Transformers (BERT) variants (~40%). Key application areas included depression detection and classification (38%), suicidal ideation detection (7%), question answering based on treatment guidelines and recommendations (7%), and emotion classification (5%). Study aims and designs were highly heterogeneous, and methodological quality was generally moderate with frequent risk-of-bias concerns. Reported performance varied widely across domains and datasets, and many evaluations relied on fictional vignettes or non-representative data, limiting generalisability. The most significant found challenges in the development and evaluation of LLMs include inconsistent accuracy, bias detection and mitigation, model transparency, data privacy, need for continual human oversight, ethical concerns and guidelines, as well as the design and conduction of high-quality studies. Conclusions: While LLMs show promise for screening, triage, decision support, and patient education—particularly in mental health—the current literature is descriptive and constrained by data, transparency, and safety gaps. We recommend prioritizing rigorous real-world evaluations, diverse benchmark datasets, bias-auditing, and governance frameworks before LLM clinical deployment and large adoption.

## Linked entities

- **Diseases:** cardiovascular disease (MONDO:0004995), cancer (MONDO:0004992), depression (MONDO:0002050)

## Full-text entities

- **Diseases:** Mental Disorders (MESH:D001523), chronic diseases (MESH:D002908), Cardiovascular Disease (MESH:D002318), suicidal ideation (MESH:D001072), depression (MESH:D003866), Cancer (MESH:D009369), mental disease (MESH:D008607)
- **Species:** Homo sapiens (human, species) [taxon 9606]

## Full text

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## Figures

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## References

111 references — full list in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12785959/full.md

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12785959