AI tool to predict and diagnose heart failure

  • Heart failure is the leading cause of hospitalization for people over the age of 65 – but diagnosis can be challenging and is often delayed through lack of detection.
  • Intervening early to improve cardiac patients’ health is critical to tackle this major chronic disease and reduce its increasing burden on health systems.

A research programme to use AI and machine learning to predict and detect heart failure, which can be difficult to diagnose and is often unrecognized, is being launched by a joint UK-US scientific team.

The programme, a collaboration between pioneering UK health-tech company Ultromics and Mayo Clinic in the US, will apply AI to forecasting heart failure.

The team will use AI analysis of ultrasound heart scans to identify the markers of heart failure and develop an image analysis risk prediction model, that can alert doctors to potential heart failure.

The aim is to develop a diagnostic and predictive tool that can rapidly identify heart failure, reduce misdiagnosis, and enable its earlier prevention. By supporting medical professionals, it will free-up their time to provide greater patient care and ease the pressure on care-teams. Ultimately, the ambition is to help save and improve the quality of patient’s lives.

Heart failure is a chronic, progressive condition in which the heart muscle is unable to pump enough blood to meet the body’s needs for blood and oxygen. Globally it affects at least 26 million people and is increasing in prevalence [1]. Worldwide, it is the leading cause of hospitalisation in people over the age of 65. In the US it affects over 6.5 million adults [2], with 550,000 new cases diagnosed each year.

CEO and co-founder of Ultromics, Dr. Ross Upton said, “This project is focused on a critical aspect of cardiac disease as it affects so many people every day. Using our pioneering AI technology stack, our objective is to map and scan databases of ultrasound images and develop detailed models to diagnose and hopefully even predict heart failure. Early intervention can make a huge difference to a patient’s treatment and quality of life – so the sooner we can identify the condition, the better.”

The research team will use the AI engine from Ultromics’ first product EchoGo Core, to analyse 10,000 echocardiograms (echos). It will analyse 2D-echocardiograms, including assessment of systolic and diastolic information throughout the entire cardiac cycle.

Dr. Upton explained: “The study has two key objectives: the first is to identify novel biomarkers that can help identify early signs of heart failure. And the second is to develop a machine learning model using the novel biomarkers to provide an automated risk prediction of heart failure at the point of care.”

This project will be led by Gary Woodward, CTO of Ultromics and Patricia A. Pellikka, M.D., cardiologist, and clinical researcher at Mayo Clinic. It is the third collaboration between Ultromics and Mayo Clinic.

Notes

1. CFR - Volume 3 Issue 1 Spring 2017 - Global Public Health Burden of Heart Failure

2. CDC data Dec 2019

About EchoGo Core:

EchoGo Core applies artificial intelligence to automate the analysis on echocardiograms. The system has been validated with the NHS in the UK, in one of the largest echo studies of its kind, with over 8,000 patients in over 30 sites.  It is a fully automated, zero-click system which has zero variability, so it allows physicians, regardless of skill level, to make an efficient and accurate diagnosis.

EchoGo Core is FDA-cleared for use in the United States, not CE Marked for use in the European Union

About Ultromics 

Ultromics is a global health technology firm which provides autonomous echocardiography analysis through innovative AI solutions empowering physicians to make fast, accurate decisions when diagnosing cardiovascular disease. EchoGo, the world's first autonomous echocardiography service provides cloud-based artificial intelligence services to support cardiac imaging diagnosis without any variability or need to touch software.

Our technology was born at the University of Oxford and built in partnership with the NHS, and has since raised over £20 million to help improve patient care, and bring diagnostic quality and resource savings to hospitals. Cardiovascular disease is the leading cause of mortality, with an estimated 17 million deaths each year. 

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