Sam Brusco, Associate Editor03.01.23
SpectraWAVE, a medical imaging company aiming to improve treatment and outcomes for coronary artery disease (CAD), has earned U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA) 510(k) clearance of its flagship intravascular imaging system, HyperVue.
The system combines next-gen DeepOCT images and near-infrared spectroscopy (NIRS) to help optimize coronary stenting in the cardiac catheterization lab. HyperVue has also now been used by multiple physicians as part of a first-in-human study.
“This is a landmark day for SpectraWAVE, but more importantly, a critical step towards improving outcomes for patients with coronary artery disease,” Eman Namati, Ph.D., CEO of SpectraWAVE told the press. “Our proprietary DeepOCT-NIRS imaging system pushes the technological limits of optical coherence tomography—both in image quality and depth—while combining it with spectroscopy for the first time, packaging both into a no-flush catheter with an artificial intelligence-powered user experience. With this regulatory clearance, we are excited to begin the transition to a commercial entity and launch our product.”
“Clinical evidence strongly suggests that patients benefit from intravascular imaging-guided stent optimization,” added Ziad A. Ali, M.D., D.Phil, Director of the DeMatteis Cardiovascular Institute at St. Francis Hospital and Heart Center and Director of the Angiographic Core Laboratory at the Cardiovascular Research Foundation in New York. “After completing the first-in-human procedures, it’s clear SpectraWAVE has built something truly special with a combination of DeepOCT and NIRS, paired with a workflow and AI-enabled image analysis that will prove beneficial for precise and optimal CAD treatment. The DeepOCT technology provides exceptional visualization of critical structures such as the external elastic membrane and calcium, while NIRS removes the guesswork in classifying lipidic plaques. I believe the HyperVue system will enable comprehensive and seamless PCI optimization, but also act as a trailblazing tool for future applications in high-risk vulnerable plaque detection and treatment.”
Intravascular imaging has helped optimize the approximately one million coronary stenting procedures per year in the U.S. It can provide insights into plaque morphology, plaque modification decisions, stent and balloon sizing and landing zone selection, confirmation of treatment optimization, and future adverse event risk.
HyperVue, according to SpectraWAVE, is the first to combine DeepOCT and NIRS while optimizing for image quality and procedural efficiency in the cath lab. The Starlight imaging catheter delivers rapid pullbacks of both imaging modalities in a single, low-profile, no-flush design. The physician controlled image acquisition and artificial intelligence-enabled image review from the sterile field.
The system combines next-gen DeepOCT images and near-infrared spectroscopy (NIRS) to help optimize coronary stenting in the cardiac catheterization lab. HyperVue has also now been used by multiple physicians as part of a first-in-human study.
“This is a landmark day for SpectraWAVE, but more importantly, a critical step towards improving outcomes for patients with coronary artery disease,” Eman Namati, Ph.D., CEO of SpectraWAVE told the press. “Our proprietary DeepOCT-NIRS imaging system pushes the technological limits of optical coherence tomography—both in image quality and depth—while combining it with spectroscopy for the first time, packaging both into a no-flush catheter with an artificial intelligence-powered user experience. With this regulatory clearance, we are excited to begin the transition to a commercial entity and launch our product.”
“Clinical evidence strongly suggests that patients benefit from intravascular imaging-guided stent optimization,” added Ziad A. Ali, M.D., D.Phil, Director of the DeMatteis Cardiovascular Institute at St. Francis Hospital and Heart Center and Director of the Angiographic Core Laboratory at the Cardiovascular Research Foundation in New York. “After completing the first-in-human procedures, it’s clear SpectraWAVE has built something truly special with a combination of DeepOCT and NIRS, paired with a workflow and AI-enabled image analysis that will prove beneficial for precise and optimal CAD treatment. The DeepOCT technology provides exceptional visualization of critical structures such as the external elastic membrane and calcium, while NIRS removes the guesswork in classifying lipidic plaques. I believe the HyperVue system will enable comprehensive and seamless PCI optimization, but also act as a trailblazing tool for future applications in high-risk vulnerable plaque detection and treatment.”
Intravascular imaging has helped optimize the approximately one million coronary stenting procedures per year in the U.S. It can provide insights into plaque morphology, plaque modification decisions, stent and balloon sizing and landing zone selection, confirmation of treatment optimization, and future adverse event risk.
HyperVue, according to SpectraWAVE, is the first to combine DeepOCT and NIRS while optimizing for image quality and procedural efficiency in the cath lab. The Starlight imaging catheter delivers rapid pullbacks of both imaging modalities in a single, low-profile, no-flush design. The physician controlled image acquisition and artificial intelligence-enabled image review from the sterile field.