NCT07308704 · Mayo Clinic
A Study Of Deep Learning For Echo Analysis, Tracking, And Evaluation
What this study is about
The purpose of this study is to deploy and evaluate informational AI-Echo algorithms that assist echo clinicians in interpreting core echocardiographic parameters (e.g., LV/RV size and function, valvular disease severity) and stratifying disease progression risk. The primary outcome is clinician usability, interpretive consistency, and workflow integration.
View original scientific description
The purpose of this study is to deploy and evaluate informational AI-Echo algorithms that assist echo clinicians in interpreting core echocardiographic parameters (e.g., LV/RV size and function, valvular disease severity) and stratifying disease progression risk. The primary outcome is clinician usability, interpretive consistency, and workflow integration. Second, we will conduct a pragmatic, stepped-wedge clinical trial with multiple arms evaluating diagnostic AI-Echo algorithms designed to identify specific cardiovascular diseases- such as genetic cardiomyopathy, ischemic heart disease, and cardiac amyloidosis-and assess whether AI deployment increases diagnostic testing and shortens time to diagnosis. Trials will be conducted using EHR-based notification systems with cluster-level randomization.
Who can participate
This study lists these criteria on ClinicalTrials.gov. A study coordinator reviews eligibility during screening — this page does not determine whether you qualify.
Inclusion criteria
- Genetic cardiomyopathy arm: Clinicians who order, perform, and interpret echocardiograms and act on echocardiogram results, including both physicians and allied health staff taking care of patients aged ≥18 years who are undergoing a comprehensive TTE at a participating Mayo Clinic site with AI-Echo analysis indicating high risk for a genetic cardiomyopathy. A high-risk score will be defined by a specific threshold determined in model development to maximize sensitivity while maintaining an adequate positive predictive value to support clinical deployment
- Ischemic cardiomyopathy arm: Clinicians who order, perform, and interpret echocardiograms and act on echocardiogram results, including both physicians and allied health staff taking care of patients aged ≥18 years who are undergoing a comprehensive TTE with AI-Echo analysis indicating high risk for ischemic cardiomyopathy. A high-risk score will be defined by a specific threshold determined in model development to maximize sensitivity while maintaining an adequate positive predictive value to support clinical deployment.
- Cardiac amyloidosis arm: Clinicians who order, perform, and interpret echocardiograms and act on echocardiogram results, including both physicians and allied health staff taking care of patients aged ≥18 years who are undergoing a comprehensive TTE with AI-Echo analysis indicating high risk for cardiac amyloidosis. A high-risk score will be defined by a specific threshold determined in model development to maximize sensitivity while maintaining an adequate positive predictive value to support clinical deployment.
- Hypertrophic cardiomyopathy (HCM) arm: Clinicians who order, perform, and interpret echocardiograms and act on echocardiogram results, including both physicians and allied health staff caring for patients aged ≥18 years who are undergoing a comprehensive TTE at a participating Mayo Clinic site, with AI-Echo analysis indicating high risk for HCM. A high-risk score will be defined by a specific threshold determined during model development to maximize sensitivity while maintaining adequate positive predictive value for clinical deployment.
Exclusion criteria
- Genetic cardiomyopathy arm: Studies performed within the past 2 years at a Mayo site or in those patients with known or suspected diagnosis of genetic cardiomyopathy under evaluation, on hospice care, or who have an expected non-cardiac life expectancy \<1 year, and patients who have opted out of institutional and state research authorizations.
- Ischemic cardiomyopathy arm: Studies performed within the past 2 years at a Mayo site or in those patients with known CAD; prior myocardial infarction; revascularization with PCI or CABG; ischemic testing within the past 12 months; hospice care or expected non-cardiac life expectancy \<1 year, and patients who have opted out of institutional and state research authorizations.
- Cardiac amyloidosis arm: Studies performed within the past 2 years at a Mayo site or in those patients with prior amyloid-specific testing (e.g., technetium pyrophosphate scan, cardiac MRI with late gadolinium enhancement suggestive of amyloid) or biopsy-proven systemic amyloidosis, on hospice care, or have expected non-cardiac life expectancy \<1 year, and patients who have opted out of institutional and state research authorizations.
- Hypertrophic cardiomyopathy (HCM) arm: Studies performed within the past 2 years at a Mayo site or patients with a known diagnosis of HCM documented in the medical record prior to the index TTE, prior septal reduction therapy (surgical myectomy or alcohol septal ablation), or patients on hospice care or with an expected non-cardiac life expectancy \<1 year, and patients who have opted out of institutional and state research authorizations.
Where
- Rochester, Minnesota
Frequently asked questions
What is a clinical trial?
A clinical trial is a research study that tests new medical treatments, drugs, devices, or procedures to determine their safety and effectiveness. Trials are carefully designed and monitored to protect participants while advancing medical knowledge.
Is it safe to participate?
Clinical trials follow strict safety guidelines and ethical standards. Trials must be reviewed and approved, and participants are closely monitored by medical professionals throughout the study. You can withdraw at any time if you choose.
Will I be compensated?
Many clinical trials offer compensation for your time, travel expenses, and inconvenience. The specific compensation varies by study and will be discussed during the screening process. All study-related medical care is typically provided at no cost to participants.
Will I receive a placebo instead of treatment?
When effective treatment exists, participants typically receive either the standard treatment plus the study intervention, or the standard treatment plus placebo. You would not be denied effective care. Placebos are primarily used when no proven treatment is available, or in addition to standard care. Your trial consent form will clearly explain what treatments you may receive.
Can I leave a trial if I change my mind?
Absolutely. Participation in clinical trials is completely voluntary. You have the right to withdraw from the study at any time, for any reason, without penalty or loss of benefits to which you are otherwise entitled.
How long does a clinical trial last?
Trial duration varies widely depending on the study design and purpose. Some trials last just a few weeks, while others may continue for months or years. The study coordinator will provide specific timeline information during your screening call.
Data: ClinicalTrials.gov · synced Apr 16, 2026 · Source of record for eligibility and locations