Cardiac magnetic resonance imaging has been shown to be one of the best technologies for the evaluation of cardiovascular pathologies. The broad application of this promising technology is expected to significantly improve the treatment of patients with heart disease in general and ischemic heart diseases in particular. However, widespread adoption of this beneficial technology has been held back by the lack of both software infrastructure and specific soft- ware sequences that take advantage of this infrastructure to provide a complete ischemic examination that can be performed rapidly in the clinical environment.
The aim of this application is to develop a commercial robust cardiovascular subsystem that will enable the broad application of this technology to the clinical realm. Under previous NIH grant support through Stanford University, we have established real-time rapid imaging sequences for the assessment of wall motion and perfusion. We have also established the utility and accuracy of rapid coronary imaging sequences for the assessment of proximal coronary anatomy. Our goal in this proposal is to integrate these methods into a robust ischemic heart disease system to realize the clinical potential of cardiac MRI in the evaluation of coronary artery disease. During Phase I of this proposal, HeartVista developed and tested the alpha version of the cardiovascular software infrastructure that provides an integrated environment for rapid cardiovascular imaging. This package includes real-time evaluation of myocardial function under stress conditions, volumetric perfusion imaging, high resolution examination of myocardial viability in real-time and high-resolution examination of the proximal coronary anatomy. We installed the system at selected alpha sites and collected patient data. Generally, our methods concern obtaining adequate temporal resolution, spatial coverage, and contrast production for stress imaging using customized pulse sequences and hardware to reduce data acquisition time, 7 developing a underlying real-time imaging platform that allows the seamless real-time integration of receiver coil functions, pulse sequences, and post-processing and display that optimizes the workflow for studying patients with ischemia. This proposal focuses on developing and validating this combined examination to provide the clinician a robust and intuitive complete ischemic evaluation package that can be performed comfortably in less than 1 hour. During Phase II of this proposal, we will continue the development of our product based on the feedback obtained during Phase I and we will conduct a clinical study to demonstrate the non-inferiority of our product compared with conventional cardiovascular MRI examinations in robustness and diagnostic accuracy.

Public Health Relevance

Ischemic heart disease remains the number one cause of mortality in the United States. Current diagnostic techniques have significant shortcomings that can result in inaccurate diagnoses. The reduced accuracy leads to a large number of unnecessary procedures. Given the enormous number of these procedures, even a modest improvement in diagnostic accuracy will have a large public-health impact. Cardiac magnetic resonance imaging has been shown to be one of the best technologies for the evaluation of cardiovascular pathologies. It is the only imaging modality that could provide all of the important parameters of ischemia evaluation in function, perfusion, viability and coronary anatomy in a single examination. The broad application of this promising technology is expected to significantly improve the treatment of patients with heart disease in general and ischemic heart diseases in particular. However, the adoption of this beneficial technology has been held back by the lack of both a software infrastructure and specific software sequences that take advantage of this infrastructure to provide a complete ischemic examination that can be performed rapidly in the clinical environment.
The aim of this application is to develop a robust commercial cardiovascular subsystem that will enable the broad clinical application of this technology.

Agency
National Institute of Health (NIH)
Institute
National Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute (NHLBI)
Type
Small Business Innovation Research Grants (SBIR) - Phase II (R44)
Project #
2R44HL084769-02
Application #
7910838
Study Section
Special Emphasis Panel (ZRG1-SBMI-T (10))
Program Officer
Buxton, Denis B
Project Start
2006-04-03
Project End
2012-03-31
Budget Start
2010-04-01
Budget End
2011-03-31
Support Year
2
Fiscal Year
2010
Total Cost
$509,354
Indirect Cost
Name
Heartvista, Inc.
Department
Type
DUNS #
602748373
City
Los Altos
State
CA
Country
United States
Zip Code
94022
Ingle, R Reeve; Santos, Juan M; Overall, William R et al. (2015) Self-gated fat-suppressed cardiac cine MRI. Magn Reson Med 73:1764-74