Elucid Receives U.S. 510(k) Clearance of PlaqueIQ™ Image Analysis Software to Aid Cardiovascular Disease Assessment
01 Octubre 2024 - 6:05AM
Business Wire
First and Only Software Validated on
Ground-Truth Histology, the Gold Standard for Plaque
Characterization
Elucid has announced it has received 510(k) clearance from the
U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA) for its PlaqueIQ™ imaging
analysis software to help physicians diagnose cardiovascular
disease (CVD). PlaqueIQ is the first FDA-cleared non-invasive
software that can objectively quantify and classify plaque
morphology based on ground-truth histology, the gold standard for
characterization of plaques. PlaqueIQ is designed to give
physicians new, clinically validated information to help stratify
patients and inform patient-specific treatment pathways.
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The Elucid PlaqueIQ™ user interface is a
fully interactive visualization of the patient’s coronary anatomy,
showing specific plaque type and amount across various views to
inform physician assessment of risk and patient-specific treatment
pathway. The original CT image is preserved to provide further
context. (Photo: Business Wire)
Cardiovascular disease is the most common cause of death and
disability globally, largely driven by myocardial infarction (MI)
and ischemic stroke caused by atherosclerosis (plaque build-up and
rupture in the arteries).1 While physicians look at many risk
factors to evaluate patient risk, such as age, diet, and lifestyle,
the strongest predictor of future events is the amount and type of
plaque patients have in their arteries.2 About half of Americans
between ages 45 and 84 have atherosclerosis and don’t know it.3
“The fact that low-risk, asymptomatic patients represent such a
large portion of the population means that even a small fraction of
them account for a substantial number of myocardial infarctions,”
said Dr. Amir Ahmadi, Clinical Associate Professor of Medicine and
Cardiology, Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai, and
co-director of the Cardiac Intensive Care Unit at Mount Sinai
Fuster Heart Hospital at Morningside.
“It’s time to shift our focus from merely estimating risk and
treating risk of MI to directly visualizing and treating the
disease itself by looking at the coronary arteries,” continued Dr.
Ahmadi. “I believe that PlaqueIQ will enable physicians to better
‘see’ the disease—specifically plaque quantity and type—so that we
can treat patients with greater precision and in personalized
manner, improve their quality of life, and ultimately prevent MI
and stroke more effectively.”
PlaqueIQ utilizes first-line diagnostic CCTA and develops
comprehensive, interactive reports to help physicians virtually
“see” plaque at the vessel level. With its basis in histology, the
software is uniquely able to non-invasively quantify and
characterize non-calcified plaque and its components such as
lipid-rich necrotic core (LRNC), giving potential insights into
high-risk plaques that are key drivers of risk of heart attack and
stroke.3 In addition, use of the software has the potential to
enable earlier identification of higher-risk plaque before presence
of symptoms or major adverse events.
“PlaqueIQ’s underpinnings in histology is a novel approach to
the field of non-invasive coronary plaque classification,” said Dr.
Mark Rabbat, professor of Medicine and Radiology, director of
Cardiac CT, and director of Structural Heart Disease Interventional
Imaging in the Division of Cardiology at Loyola University Chicago.
“Armed with additional data on vulnerable plaque components, we can
make more informed treatment decisions on drug therapy selection or
the need to send the patient to the cath lab. I believe plaque
quantification has the potential to greatly improve outcomes for
patients while providing tremendous savings to the healthcare
system.”
Physicians simply send patient images to Elucid with a single
mouse click. Then Elucid applies PlaqueIQ’s image-restoration
algorithms to the file to mitigate motion and calcium blooming
artifacts. Specially trained analysts segment the data creating a
3D model of the patient’s coronary arteries. The software then
identifies, classifies and quantifies tissue structure and
composition.
“Elucid’s mission is to commercialize proven technologies that
can make a meaningful difference in the prevalence of heart attack
and stroke, and the FDA clearance of PlaqueIQ is a huge step
forward towards that goal,” Kelly Huang, CEO of Elucid. “We know
that plaque is the key contributor to these devastating events,
and, specifically, high-risk plaque components, but you can’t treat
what you can’t see. With PlaqueIQ, physicians can gain new and
insightful histology-based information to help better understand
plaque composition and get ahead of the disease.”
Elucid is currently performing beta testing on PlaqueIQ and
anticipates making the software available for limited release later
in Q4 2024. The company is also pursuing an indication for
non-invasive measurement of fractional flow reserve (FFRCT™),
uniquely derived from its PlaqueIQ technology, to measure coronary
blockages and the extent of ischemia.
About Elucid
Elucid is a Boston-based AI medical technology company dedicated
to developing technology designed to provide physicians with a more
precise view of atherosclerosis (coronary plaque buildup), the root
cause of cardiovascular disease. The company’s PlaqueIQ™ product is
designed to help physicians prioritize and personalize treatment
based on actual disease, rather than population-based risk of
disease. PlaqueIQ is the only FDA-cleared computed tomography
angiography (CTA) algorithm that objectively quantifies plaque
morphology validated against ground truth histology, the gold
standard for characterization of plaque, as indicated by renowned
pathologists. PlaqueIQ equips physicians with critical information
regarding the type and amount of plaque in arteries that can lead
to heart attack and stroke. Elucid is also pursuing an indication
for FFRCT™, derived from its plaque algorithm, to help identify
coronary blockages and the extent of ischemia non-invasively. For
more information, visit elucid.com.
___________________________ 1 World Health Organization (WHO),
Cardiovascular diseases (CVDs) fact sheet. 11 June 2021; Available
from:
https://www.who.int/en/news-room/fact-sheets/detail/cardiovascular-diseases-(cvds).
2 Pahwa R, Jialal I. Atherosclerosis. [Updated 2023 Aug 8]. In:
StatPearls [Internet]. Treasure Island (FL): StatPearls Publishing;
2020 Jan-. Available from:
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/books/NBK507799/ (accessed 03.17.2023)
3 A. Hafiane, Vulnerable plaque, characteristics, detection, and
potential therapies, J. Cardiovasc. Dev. Dis. 6 (3) (2019).
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