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The Accuracy of an Artificially-intelligent Stethoscope

A

Akron Children's Hospital

Status

Completed

Conditions

Structural Heart Disease
Congenital Heart Disease
Heart Murmurs

Treatments

Other: Physical Examination
Device: Artificially-Intelligent Stethoscope

Study type

Observational

Funder types

Other

Identifiers

Details and patient eligibility

About

This study will characterize the accuracy of a commercially available artificially-intelligent stethoscope in determining which childhood murmurs suggest underlying congenital structural heart disease and therefore warrant diagnostic echocardiograms.

Full description

Heart murmurs can be ausculted in most pediatric patients, but underlying Congenital Structural Heart (CSH) Disease is rare. Nevertheless, CSH Disease is often first suggested by the presence of a murmur. Primary care providers refer pediatric patients to Cardiologists for murmur evaluations with low accuracy, and this pattern results in:

  1. needless emotional strain on many patients with functionally normal hearts and their families,
  2. increased morbidity and mortality rates for rare patients with delayed cardiac diagnoses, and
  3. exorbitant costs to society.

Referral accuracy for murmur evaluations probably is low because the differences between innocent and pathological murmurs can be subtle. Computer-assisted analysis of heart sounds may increase the accuracy of primary care referrals to pediatric cardiologists, but the accuracy of the only FDA-approved artificially-intelligent cardiac auscultation system, Zargis Medical Corporation's Cardioscan®, has never been determined prospectively in an unselected population of live pediatric patients. As a primary endpoint, the study herein proposed would prospectively compare the sensitivity and specificity of the Cardioscan® with that of CHMCA's Pediatric Cardiologists in the identification of cardiac pathology among 300 new and unselected pediatric patients referred to CHMCA's cardiologists for murmur evaluations, using two-dimensional transthoracic echocardiography as the common gold-standard. Double-blinding will be in place. The study also will attempt secondarily to gauge the clinical significance of pathology missed by the Cardioscan®, to define sub-populations of patients among which the Cardioscan's® judgment should be considered less accurate, and to gather data concerning the value and acceptability to families of the Cardioscan®. If (as expected) the Cardioscan's® accuracy merely approaches that of Pediatric Cardiologists, then the study herein proposed would still establish the Cardioscan® as a formidable tool for primary care providers-a helpful, billable, and potentially cost-saving alternative to consulting Cardiology on patients with probably- or possibly-innocent murmurs. Data collection for this project will occur predominantly within CHMCA's Heart Center in Akron, although some data collection may occur within CHMCA and/or at CHMCA's Heart Centers in Beachwood and/or Boardman. Minimal disruption to existing clinical patient flow through those settings would be expected and the entire protocol is expected to be completely painless and noninvasive, with no foreseeable health risks.

Enrollment

300 estimated patients

Sex

All

Volunteers

Accepts Healthy Volunteers

Inclusion criteria

  • The patient must present to a consulted cardiologist for a 1st non-primary care murmur evaluation.

Exclusion criteria

  • Non English-speakers
  • At least moderately agitated or disruptive patients
  • An echocardiogram or a Cardiology evaluation was done previously
  • The patient no longer has an ausculable murmur at presentation.
  • The patient didn't have a transthoracic echocardiogram with Color Doppler done.
  • Patients admitted to the NICU before protocol completes.
  • Protocol can't be completed on the day of presentation.

Trial design

300 participants in 1 patient group

All subjects
Treatment:
Other: Physical Examination
Device: Artificially-Intelligent Stethoscope

Trial contacts and locations

3

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Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov

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