Our Technology
We innovate for better healthcare efficiency.
We've developed novel machine learning algorithms to assist clinicians to quickly and accurately triage patients. This eliminates manual and time-consuming processes, and reduces reliance on data analysis by specialists.
Quick Facts:
In the U.S, chest pain is the most common symptom in patients ages 65 years and older and second most common in patients ages 15 to 65 years treated in EDs
There are >7 million ED visits annually with a compound annual growth of 10%
The worldwide market for cardiac monitoring and diagnostic devices is forecast to grow to $2.3B by 2017
aiTriage™ produces a cardiac risk assessment within 5 minutes, allowing clinicians to treat high-risk patients immediately
Low risk patients can be triaged and discharged within 2 hours, saving 6 hours from the current practice
aiTriage™ is better at predicting risk of MACE than gold standard assessments such as TIMI and MEWS
Chest Pain in the ED
Chest pain is a common but non-specific complaint with most patients not showing any life-threatening symptoms. A subset of patients will go on to have a Major Adverse Cardiac Event (MACE), which can result in sudden death. The current process to triage and differentiate these patients is time consuming, complex and highly dependent on the clinician's years of experience.
aiTriage™ for MACE
We've piloted and patented the first intelligent monitoring system to incorporate both HRV and traditional vital signs to predict clinical outcomes of patients who are at risk of MACE – incorporating heart rate variability (HRV), electrocardiogram (ECG) parameters and vital signs into a novel scoring system for a rapid, real-time risk stratification of MACE.
Faster & Dependable Risk Assessment
aiTriage™ delivers results within 5 minutes, with an AUC score exceeding 0.8, compared to Thrombolysis In Myocardial Infarction (TIMI) and Modified Early Warning Score (MEWS) – both being gold standard assessments currently used in clinical settings. This shortens triage time from 1 - 2 hours to 5 minutes, with high risk patients getting the timely intervention that is needed.