Michael Barbella, Managing Editor03.31.23
Sensydia has completed its 225-subject development study at the University of Pittsburgh Medical Center (UPMC).
The company conducted the study to collect data for its artificial intelligence-powered, non-invasive Cardiac Performance System (CPS), which uses heart sound analysis to enable earlier detection and more effective therapy guidance for patients suffering from heart failure and pulmonary hypertension. CPS uses ultra-sensitive biosensors to provide clinicians with rapid, non-invasive measurement of ejection fraction, cardiac output, pulmonary artery pressure, and pulmonary capillary wedge pressure in a handheld device. Knowledge of these parameters is critical in the care of individuals with compromised heart function. To currently obtain these measurements, patients must undergo echocardiography and invasive catheterization, which are resource intensive and carry significant risk of complications. In contrast, CPS measurements are fast and safe, and can be performed almost anywhere with minimal training.
"When we began this study at UPMC during the height of the COVID-19 pandemic, our original enrollment target for the study was 110 subjects, but we ended up doubling that after hearing positive feedback from the UPMC study staff," Sensydia President/CEO Anthony Arnold said. "This is Sensydia’s fourth successful study and we will continue to collect data across multiple sites to improve the performance and utility of the artificial intelligence algorithms that power our breakthrough CPS platform."
Sensydia previously conducted a study at the Ronald Reagan UCLA Medical Center that contributed to the U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA) clearance for its ejection fraction algorithm and another study at the OHSU Knight Cardiovascular Institute for its cardiac output algorithm.
“Having access to accurate cardiac performance data for heart patients is critical for improving outcomes,” said Samir Saba, M.D., chief of the Division of Cardiology and co-director, UPMC Heart and Vascular Institute at the University of Pittsburgh Medical Center. “This Cardiac Performance System (CPS) shows promise as a non-invasive alternative to right-heart catheterization. The CPS platform has the potential to revolutionize the way we diagnose and treat heart failure and pulmonary hypertension by enabling rapid, non-invasive assessment of cardiac pressures.”
In January 2022, Sensydia's CPS received FDA Breakthrough Device Designation. Sensydia plans to use data from this 225-subject study to develop the CPS pulmonary pressure algorithms.
The achievement of this 225-subject milestone comes at a time when Sensydia is closing a new round of funding. With its CPS device, Sensydia aims to democratize cardiac assessment and bring fast and safe cardiac assessment to the lowest acuity setting.
Sensydia is working to redefine heart failure therapy by expanding access to cardiac performance assessment outside the hospital’s catheterization lab with its Cardiac Performance System. The United States currently spends more than $30 billion annually on diagnosing and managing heart failure, which requires costly and risky in-hospital catheterization procedures to obtain an accurate cardiac performance assessment. Sensydia’s CPS device is trained against gold-standard measurement methods in the catheterization lab using waveform machine learning to deliver accurate, non-invasive assessment of cardiac performance (cardiac output, ejection fraction, and pulmonary pressures) almost anywhere in under five minutes. In 2018, Sensydia received FDA 510(k) clearance for non-invasive measurement of ejection fraction by CPS.
The company conducted the study to collect data for its artificial intelligence-powered, non-invasive Cardiac Performance System (CPS), which uses heart sound analysis to enable earlier detection and more effective therapy guidance for patients suffering from heart failure and pulmonary hypertension. CPS uses ultra-sensitive biosensors to provide clinicians with rapid, non-invasive measurement of ejection fraction, cardiac output, pulmonary artery pressure, and pulmonary capillary wedge pressure in a handheld device. Knowledge of these parameters is critical in the care of individuals with compromised heart function. To currently obtain these measurements, patients must undergo echocardiography and invasive catheterization, which are resource intensive and carry significant risk of complications. In contrast, CPS measurements are fast and safe, and can be performed almost anywhere with minimal training.
"When we began this study at UPMC during the height of the COVID-19 pandemic, our original enrollment target for the study was 110 subjects, but we ended up doubling that after hearing positive feedback from the UPMC study staff," Sensydia President/CEO Anthony Arnold said. "This is Sensydia’s fourth successful study and we will continue to collect data across multiple sites to improve the performance and utility of the artificial intelligence algorithms that power our breakthrough CPS platform."
Sensydia previously conducted a study at the Ronald Reagan UCLA Medical Center that contributed to the U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA) clearance for its ejection fraction algorithm and another study at the OHSU Knight Cardiovascular Institute for its cardiac output algorithm.
“Having access to accurate cardiac performance data for heart patients is critical for improving outcomes,” said Samir Saba, M.D., chief of the Division of Cardiology and co-director, UPMC Heart and Vascular Institute at the University of Pittsburgh Medical Center. “This Cardiac Performance System (CPS) shows promise as a non-invasive alternative to right-heart catheterization. The CPS platform has the potential to revolutionize the way we diagnose and treat heart failure and pulmonary hypertension by enabling rapid, non-invasive assessment of cardiac pressures.”
In January 2022, Sensydia's CPS received FDA Breakthrough Device Designation. Sensydia plans to use data from this 225-subject study to develop the CPS pulmonary pressure algorithms.
The achievement of this 225-subject milestone comes at a time when Sensydia is closing a new round of funding. With its CPS device, Sensydia aims to democratize cardiac assessment and bring fast and safe cardiac assessment to the lowest acuity setting.
Sensydia is working to redefine heart failure therapy by expanding access to cardiac performance assessment outside the hospital’s catheterization lab with its Cardiac Performance System. The United States currently spends more than $30 billion annually on diagnosing and managing heart failure, which requires costly and risky in-hospital catheterization procedures to obtain an accurate cardiac performance assessment. Sensydia’s CPS device is trained against gold-standard measurement methods in the catheterization lab using waveform machine learning to deliver accurate, non-invasive assessment of cardiac performance (cardiac output, ejection fraction, and pulmonary pressures) almost anywhere in under five minutes. In 2018, Sensydia received FDA 510(k) clearance for non-invasive measurement of ejection fraction by CPS.