The Role of Agentic Artificial Intelligence in Healthcare: A Systematic Review
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Background/ Objectives: Agentic AI represents a promising evolution of AI technology applied to healthcare, with systems increasingly capable of operating autonomously to achieve defined clinical goals. However, the literature lacks conceptual clarity between “AI agents” and “agentic AI”, and few studies have rigorously explored their clinical applications. Therefore, this study aims to conduct a novel systematic review addressing this gap by examining agentic AI systems in healthcare settings, characterizing their applications, features, outcomes, and limitations, and clarifying the conceptual distinctions between AI agents and agentic AI systems using predefined and objective criteria. Methods A comprehensive search was conducted across PubMed, Embase, Cochrane, Scopus, and Google Scholar on April 6th, 2025. Studies were included if they involved AI systems in healthcare settings that demonstrated the following agentic features: autonomous operation, goal-directed behavior, and initiating action. Data on the clinical tasks achieved by the agents, key findings, features, and limitations were collected from the included studies. Screening and extraction followed PRISMA guidelines, with Risk of Bias assessed using ROBINS-I and Cochrane's Risk of Bias tools. Results Of 984 retrieved records, seven studies met the inclusion criteria, spanning domains such as emergency medicine, oncology, radiology, and rehabilitation. Multi-agent architecture was frequently used to decompose and coordinate complex workflows. Among the included studies, the AIs showed high accuracy in diagnosing cancer patients, conducting treatment plans, sending alerts, coaching messages, analysing image data, and adapting to challenging experimental scenarios. While demonstrating potential for improved efficiency, task accuracy, and patient engagement, significant limitations were noted: narrow task scope, lack of physical agency, limited clinical validation, and barriers to integration into real-world healthcare systems. Only one system had been deployed in a patient-facing trial setting. Conclusion The current literature suggests an emerging role and application of Agentic AI, holding promise with the potential to revolutionize diagnostics, triage, treatment planning, and patient management. However, real-world implementation and evaluations in the literature are limited. Future research must address critical validation, regulation, ethics, and clinical integration challenges to realize their full potential. Clear operational definitions and frameworks for evaluating agency are essential to support safe and effective deployment of these systems.