Phono- and Electrocardiogram Assisted Detection of Valvular Disease



Status:Recruiting
Conditions:Cardiology, Cardiology, Cardiology, Cardiology
Therapuetic Areas:Cardiology / Vascular Diseases
Healthy:No
Age Range:18 - Any
Updated:2/6/2019
Start Date:February 22, 2018
End Date:December 1, 2019
Contact:John Chorba, MD
Email:john.chorba@ucsf.edu
Phone:4156017361

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The diagnosis of valvular heart disease (VHD), or its absence, invariably requires cardiac
imaging. A familiar and inexpensive tool to assist in the diagnosis or exclusion of
significant VHD could both expedite access to life-saving therapies and reduce the need for
costly testing. The FDA-approved Eko Duo device consists of a digital stethoscope and a
single-lead electrocardiogram (ECG), which wirelessly pairs with the Eko Mobile application
to allow for simultaneous recording and visualization of phono- and electrocardiograms. These
features uniquely situate this device to accumulate large sets of auscultatory data on
patients both with and without VHD.

In this study, the investigators seek to develop an automated system to identify VHD by
phono- and electrocardiogram. Specifically, the investigators will attempt to develop machine
learning algorithms to learn the phonocardiograms of patients with clinically important
aortic stenosis (AS) or mitral regurgitation (MR), and then task the algorithms to identify
subjects with clinically important VHD, as identified by a gold standard, from naïve
phonocardiograms. The investigators anticipate that the study has the potential to
revolutionize the diagnosis of VHD by providing a more accurate substitute to traditional
auscultation.

Phono- and Electrocardiogram Assisted Detection of Valvular Disease (PEA-Valve Study)

Specific aim(s) Aim 1: Can a machine learning algorithm derived from simultaneous phono- and
electrocardiogram recordings reliably diagnose clinically important aortic stenosis?

Aim 2: Can a machine learning algorithm derived from simultaneous phono- and
electrocardiogram recordings reliably diagnose clinically important mitral regurgitation?

Significance Valvular heart disease (VHD) is a common global health problem, with
population-based studies showing a prevalence of 10% for aortic stenosis (AS) and 20% for
mitral regurgitation (MR). New surgical and interventional advances allow for the treatment
of patients at an older age or whose risk of intervention would previously have been
untenable. Given that the incidence of both MR and AS increases with increasing age, there is
a growing need to identify these conditions so as to offer disease-altering therapies.

In current clinical practice, the diagnosis of VHD relies heavily on echocardiography. This,
in turn, requires both a referral from a provider with a clinical suspicion for VHD,
typically from an abnormality on auscultation, as well as access to the echocardiogram
itself. MR and AS both result in reliably reproducible auscultatory findings: holosystolic
and systolic crescendo-decrescendo murmurs, respectively. Yet despite this, auscultation as a
diagnostic tool is notoriously poor: its accuracy to detect MR and AS ranges only from 5-40%.
These factors all lead to concerns for underdiagnosis of these increasingly treatable
conditions.

Here, the investigators will address the needs for both greater access to and improved
diagnostic accuracy of testing for VHD. The investigators will utilize a combination of
phonocardiogram (PCG) and single-lead electrocardiogram (ECG) recordings, synced in real-time
to a secure cloud-based server, using the Eko Duo electronic stethoscope. With these data,
the investigators will develop and validate a machine learning algorithm to diagnose
clinically important AS or MR. As the Eko Duo is essentially similar to a traditional
stethoscope, an iconic tool widely accepted by patients and providers alike, its use to drive
an automated detection algorithm is both feasible and attractive as a substitute for
traditional auscultation. Furthermore, by shifting the burden of test interpretation away
from the clinician and onto the algorithm, the investigators hypothesize that this will
improve overall diagnostic accuracy.

Methods Overview of design: Cross-sectional study of all subjects undergoing clinical
echocardiograms at the UCSF adult echocardiography laboratory

Study subjects Overview: The investigators will enroll adult subjects undergoing clinical
echocardiograms at the UCSF Parnassus campus. These subjects will be grouped into derivation
and validation cohorts sequentially, stratified by case status, so as to reach the expected
sample size. Such grouping will occur after subject enrollment and data collection.

Target Population: Adults with either moderate-to-severe to severe AS or moderate-to-severe
to severe MR (cases) and adults with structurally normal hearts with minimal VHD (controls).
In a more-stringent, parallel analysis, a target population of controls will be defined as
having any degree of AS or MR less than moderate-to-severe.

Accessible Population: Adults meeting the entry criteria undergoing clinical echocardiograms
at the UCSF echocardiography laboratory amenable to participation.

Sampling Scheme: The investigators will approach subjects presenting to the adult
echocardiography laboratory at UCSF Parnassus consecutively. Additionally, the investigators
will pre-screen subjects for a high likelihood of having AS or MR (based on indication for
study and prior diagnoses in the APEX medical record) and selectively target their enrollment
during situations where the enrollment capacity of the study coordinator is saturated.

Recruitment Strategy: Introduction of study at time of registering for echocardiogram with a
brochure or flyer, followed by in-person approaching of potential subjects while awaiting the
clinical echocardiogram.

Retention Strategy: None. The investigators will retain a master file of the medical record
numbers to identify contact information in the future if deemed necessary.

Measurements Overview: The study will focus on two measurements: 1) the gold standard
assessment of VHD by echocardiogram, as reported by the UCSF echocardiography laboratory. 2)
30 second simultaneous PCG and single-lead ECG recordings by the Eko Duo device at each of
the four standard cardiac auscultatory positions, with optional additional recordings with
the Eko Core device. The study takes advantage of the fact that all clinical echocardiogram
reports include these valvular assessments.

Gold Standard: The echocardiogram is accepted as the gold standard for diagnosis of VHD
severity by the cardiology community. To minimize the burden on the investigators, as well as
reduce costs, the investigators will take advantage of that all clinical echocardiogram
reports include assessments of VHD, which will serve as the gold standard. These reports
follow American Society for Echocardiography (ASE) guidelines, which allow grading of VHD as
follows: none, mild, moderate, or severe. The UCSF echocardiography laboratory includes
additional categories of trace, mild-to-moderate, moderate-to-severe, and critical, allowing
for interpretations where individual parameters within the study conflict. The primary
measurement will be the final conclusion of severity of VHD for MR or AS, as reported by a
board-certified cardiologist. The investigators will define "clinically important" VHD as
that graded moderate-to-severe or worse, as this would encompass all levels of disease which
could require direct intervention. In addition, the investigators will extract the entire
echocardiography report, as well as the images of the echocardiogram files, so as to save the
data for future use as new research questions arise.

Device Measurements: Recordings of the simultaneous PCG and single-lead ECG will be performed
for each subject in a standardized manner. Each subject will undergo 30 second recordings
using the Eko Duo device at the four standard auscultation positions. Observers will be
trained on the systematic method of obtaining measurements. Time and patient permitting, the
investigators will also obtain the same recordings using the Eko Core device, which uses the
same software but does not include ECG recording. As the device will allow visualization of
the PCG during recording, the observer will get real-time feedback on positioning of the
device to maximize the quality of the recording at each position. The investigators will plan
for periodic review of recordings to ensure adequate data quality. The investigators
anticipate that this flexibility and real-time feedback will improve the generalizability of
the use of the device to a real-world (i.e. non-study) clinical situation.

Confounders and Bias: The derivation and validation of the algorithms will occur remotely,
after the clinical echocardiogram has been performed, and therefore with no effect on the
outcome of the gold standard. The test may be influenced by the presence of other conditions
causing systolic murmurs (including VHD other than AS or MR, or congenital heart disease).
The investigators will include these measures from the echocardiogram report to compare test
performance in those with and without these other conditions.

Statistical issues Null Hypothesis: A machine learning algorithm cannot predict the presence
of clinically important AS or MR.

Sample Size Justification:

- Sensitivity of Algorithm: 90%

- Specificity of Algorithm: 90%

- Target Likelihood Ratio (+) of Algorithm [LR(R)]: 9 (derived from Sn / [1 - Sp])

- Minimum Likelihood Ratio (+) of Algorithm [LR(R)]: 5

- Confidence Level = 0.95 (alpha = 0.05)

- Confidence Interval [LR(R)]: 5.120-15.820

- Sample Size = 110 per group; 330 per cohort (control, AS case, MR case); 660 overall
(training and validation cohorts)

- Summary: Assuming the sensitivity and specificity of the machine learning algorithm for
detection of clinically important AS or MR are both 0.9, a total sample size of 660 is
not expected to go below the threshold likelihood ratio of 5.0 in the 95% confidence
interval in either the derivation or validation cohorts.

- Justification of Critical Assumptions: The investigators assume that the algorithm can
produce a sensitivity and specificity of 90% in detecting aortic stenosis or mitral
regurgitation compared to hearts with no valvular disease, based upon prior published
reports using neural networks, using sample sizes of under 100 cases. Furthermore, the
investigators estimate a minimum likelihood ratio of 5 would be necessary for the test
to be clinically useful. While this estimate works well for the validation set, the
number needed for the derivation set is less clear; the estimates above are a
conservative number. The investigators anticipate training the algorithm after
enrollment of every 20 cases using a bootstrapping approach; this will provide interim
test characteristics and help determine the true number needed for the derivation set.
As this is, in part, a pilot study, identification of the true sensitivity and
specificity of the test is in itself a valuable result.

Analysis approach: The investigators will generate ROC curves (plotting Sn vs. 1-Sp) for
algorithm scores for the validation set. Ultimately the investigators will generate 4 curves:
two each for MR and AS, using algorithms generated by the primary (defining controls as
having no greater than mild VHD) and secondary (defining controls as not having
moderate-to-severe or greater VHD) approaches. Additionally, the investigators anticipate
performing exploratory, descriptive analyses of the algorithm itself, by identifying clinical
correlates to the characteristics most heavily weighted in detecting AS or MR.

Miscellaneous Ethical considerations: No major concerns. Data will be securely stored on
HIPAA compliant platforms. The study qualifies as minimal risk by UCSF CHR criteria.

Pretest plans: Prior to study recruitment, study staff will collect data on themselves and
providers to test the data collection system. During initial subject recruitment, study staff
will review the process after each day to discuss roadblocks or concerns.

Data Management Plan: Data from the study will come from two sources. Reports of
echocardiograms, extracted from the electronic medical record (APEX), will be reviewed by
study staff to generate the main database of disease characteristics. A master file linking
subject identifiers with identifiable information, as well as extracted and de-identified
echocardiogram reports and de-identified raw echocardiogram images will be stored on a secure
research server used by the Division of Cardiology. Recorded PCG and ECG data (the actual
study measurements) will be synced in real-time to a secure, HIPAA-compliant, cloud-based
server managed by Eko Devices. At pre-specified times of algorithm training, the machine
learning team (coordinated by Eko Devices) will be provided keys to the assignment of subject
identifier to VHD category.

Quality control measures: Periodic review of the recorded data will be performed by the study
PI to ensure appropriate data quality.

Timetable:

Contract/Logistics Subject Enrollment Algorithm Development Analysis Publication Overall
Timetable: 9 Months

Inclusion Criteria:

- Able to provide consent

- Undergoing a complete echocardiogram

Exclusion Criteria:

- Refusal to participate
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