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AI-CARE: Artificial Intelligence for Cardiovascular Analysis and Risk Evaluation

AI-CARE: Artificial Intelligence for Cardiovascular Analysis and Risk Evaluation

Recruiting
22 years and older
All
Phase N/A

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Overview

This study will test how well an artificial intelligence (AI) software called Aorta AIM measures the size of the aorta (the body's main blood vessel) from CT scans. The aorta can become enlarged over time, which may lead to serious health problems. Doctors need to measure the aorta accurately to monitor patients and decide on treatment.

Currently, doctors measure the aorta manually on CT scans, which takes time and can vary between different doctors. Aorta AIM is designed to measure the aorta automatically and consistently.

In this study, researchers will compare Aorta AIM's measurements to those made by experienced radiologists or cardiologists (doctors who specialize in reading medical images). The study will use CT scans that have already been taken as part of routine medical care - no additional scans or procedures are needed.

The study will include approximately 250 participants across multiple hospitals in Brazil and the United States. Participants will be adults who have had a chest or abdominal CT scan that shows their aorta.

The main goals are to:

  • Check if Aorta AIM measures the aorta as accurately as radiologists
  • See if Aorta AIM can help doctors work more efficiently
  • Evaluate if the software works well in different hospital settings and with different types of patients

This research may help improve how doctors monitor aortic disease and make treatment decisions in the future. There are no risks to participants since the study only uses existing medical images.

Eligibility

  • Adults ≥22 years at time of imaging
  • Studies performed 1 Jan 2016 - 31 August 2025
  • CT imaging of the whole, thoracic, or abdominal aorta, with or without contrast enhancement, acquired with any gating protocol (including non-gated)
  • Slice thickness ≤ 3mm
  • CT imaging in which truncation creates discontinuity within a targeted aortic region, preventing reliable diameter measurement (e.g., cardiac-focused CT acquisitions where an incomplete or absent aortic arch creates discontinuity between the aortic root and the descending thoracic aorta)
    • Partial aortic coverage is not grounds for exclusion. Where truncation affects individual regions, only those specific regions will be excluded from analysis; remaining fully captured regions will be retained for measurement.
  • Metal implants \<5cm from aorta (e.g. thoracic stent)
  • Prior aortic surgery
  • Severe motion artifacts (e.g. \>3mm vessel blurring)
  • Congenital aortic anomalies (e.g. coarctation, vascular rings)
  • Post-traumatic aortic repairs
  • The patient opted out of having their data used for medical research before the date of cross-referencing by the site team

Study details
    Aortic Aneurysm
    Aortic Aneurysm Abdominal
    Aortic Aneurysm and Dissection
    Aortic Aneurysm
    Thoracoabdominal

NCT07438327

Aiatella Oy

13 May 2026

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A clinical trial is a study designed to test specific interventions or treatments' effectiveness and safety, paving the way for new, innovative healthcare solutions.

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