Despite the growing clinical adoption of large language models (LLMs), current approaches heavily rely on single model architectures. To overcome risks of obsolescence and rigid dependence on single model systems, we present a novel framework, termed the Consensus Mechanism. Mimicking clinical triage and multidisciplinary clinical decision-making, the Consensus Mechanism implements an ensemble of specialized medical expert agents enabling improved clinical decision making while maintaining robust adaptability. This architecture enables the Consensus Mechanism to be optimized for cost, latency, or performance, purely based on its interior model configuration.To rigorously evaluate the Consensus Mechanism, we employed three medical evaluation benchmarks: MedMCQA, MedQA, and MedXpertQA Text, and the differential diagnosis dataset, DDX+. On MedXpertQA, the Consensus Mechanism achieved an accuracy of 61.0% compared to 53.5% and 45.9% for OpenAI's O3 and Google's Gemini 2.5 Pro. Improvement was consistent across benchmarks with an increase in accuracy on MedQA () and MedMCQA (). These accuracy gains extended to differential diagnosis generation, where our system demonstrated improved recall and precision (F1 = 0.326 vs. F1 = 0.2886) and a higher top-1 accuracy for DDX (Top1 = 52.0% vs. Top1 = 45.2%).
View on arXiv@article{kumthekar2025_2505.23075, title={ Second Opinion Matters: Towards Adaptive Clinical AI via the Consensus of Expert Model Ensemble }, author={ Amit Kumthekar and Zion Tilley and Henry Duong and Bhargav Patel and Michael Magnoli and Ahmed Omar and Ahmed Nasser and Chaitanya Gharpure and Yevgen Reztzov }, journal={arXiv preprint arXiv:2505.23075}, year={ 2025 } }