AI improves confidence in CAD detection from a stress echocardiogram

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Ultromics’ AI supports clinicians with heart disease prediction

Ultromics has announced the publication of a study assessing its EchoGo platform, powered by Artificial Intelligence (AI), which it says significantly improved the accuracy and confidence in coronary artery disease (CAD) detection from a stress echocardiogram.

The study, published in JACC: Cardiovascular Imaging, revealed doctors are more confident in CAD diagnoses with the support of EchoGo, Ultromics said in a press release.

Ultromics’ has developed an AI algorithm that automatically analyses stress echocardiograms and tells the clinician whether that patient is at risk of CAD. The study assessed Ultromics’ deep learning algorithms trained on hundreds of thousands of data to predict CAD risk, and was able to distinguish the CAD risk in patients with 10% more sensitivity than manual analysis.

“Using AI to make CAD predictions is a real breakthrough for science, it will help spot earlier signs of a problem, prevent unnecessary tests and procedures, and help save more lives,” said Ross Upton, a study author and the CEO and co-founder of Ultromics.

“Traditionally, CAD analysis is done through manual observations,” Upton continued. “However, the complexity of identifying subtle features within an image means that it is not always easy to correctly identify CAD on first visit, and accurate diagnoses can be subject to the operator’s expertise. This means heart disease, the number one global killer, gets missed one in five times. With the support of our AI service, clinicians can make confident diagnoses and spot features which would have been impossible to detect using traditional methods.”

The study—funded by Ultromics, the University of Oxford’s Cardiovascular Clinical Research Facility, Lantheus Medical Imaging, the National Institute of Health Research Oxford Biomedical Research Centre, and Oregon Health and Science University—identified two major findings.

During the first portion of the study, Ultromics AI was trained and tested to identify patients with severe CAD. Patients without CAD were correctly identified by AI 92.7% of the time and patients with CAD were correctly identified 84.4% of the time. The result showed a 10% increase in accuracy compared to the human eye.

The second part of the study sought to explore how an AI classification might impact physicians’ and echocardiographers’ clinical interpretation of stress echocardiograms. Two physicians from the USA that are accredited by the American Society of Echocardiology and two from the UK, accredited by the British Society of Echocardiography, tested Ultromics’ AI and were asked to review heart ultrasounds to determine whether patients had CAD.

Each physician was shown each heart ultrasound two times, one month apart—once with the AI’s decision and once without—and were asked to determine whether they were confident in their clinical interpretation. When provided with the AI-generated classifications, the level of agreement between all four physicians increased 15% or more—from between 68% and 79% accuracy, to between 83% and 97% accuracy.

“Echocardiography is such a critical modality for diagnosing cardiovascular disease, said Professor Paul Leeson, professor of Cardiovascular Medicine at the University of Oxford and the co-founder of Ultromics. “It is affordable, accessible, portable, comfortable, non-invasive, and does not emit radiation. The fact that we can now apply artificial intelligence to echocardiography to perform at this level is truly revolutionary for patient care.”


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