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Emerging Technologies for Coronary Artery Disease Imaging: Vision 2040

Design with NIH logo, workshop title: Emerging Technologies for Coronary Artery Disease Imaging: Vision 2040; meeting date Sept 17-28, 2025; meeting location, Natcher Auditorium, Building 45, NIH Campus, Bethesda, MD; Workshop Co-chairs pictured: Koen Nieman, M.D., Ph.D., Stanford University, and Brittany Weber, Ph.D., UT Southwestern; Keynote Speakers: Keith Channon, FRCP, FMedSci, University of Oxford, UK, and Valentin Fuster, M.D., Ph.D., Mt. Sinai Fuster Heart Hospital;

Wednesday, September 17, 2025 - 9:00 AM to Thursday, September 18, 2025 - 3:40 PM

In Person

This workshop is dedicated to pinpointing the most promising *NEW* and emerging imaging technologies in the upcoming decade to elevate the landscape of coronary artery disease (CAD) imaging. Through this workshop, we aim to chart the trajectory of forthcoming CAD imaging advancements. The workshop will explore how these can radically change CAD patient management by leveraging cutting-edge imaging hardware, software, pioneering new probes, and integrating artificial intelligence (AI). Our goal is ambitious but achievable: to pioneer a screening instrument for CAD that is safe, efficient, and widely accessible; that can identify subclinical CAD; and that can dramatically reduce CAD-related morbidity and mortality rates by 2040.

The workshop will address the following questions:

  1. How can we conceptualize a CAD screening tool analogous to mammography that boasts minimal radiation, ultra-high resolution, cost-efficiency, and is ubiquitously accessible? What guidelines might shape this mammography-like screening tool for subclinical CAD? What technological advancements are necessary to achieve this?

  2. How will advancements in imaging technologies and methods improve and refine CAD measurements? How can enhanced imaging inform CAD interventions and treatments, and revolutionize patient management? That is, will earlier disease detection prompt or encourage earlier intervention?

  3. How will data science propel our primary objective of screening subclinical CAD and measurably reduce CAD-related morbidity and mortality?

  4. How can CAD imaging be established as a comprehensive and predictive biomarker in cardiovascular clinical trials?

  5. How can we provide more accessible implementation and dissemination of CAD screening technologies?

Individuals requiring Sign Language Interpreters or other reasonable accommodations to facilitate their participation in this event should contact the workshop coordinator, Julia D'Albora, at jdalbora@seiservices.commailto: at least five (5) days prior to the commencement of the event.

Venue
Ruth Kirschstein Auditorium

Natcher Conference Center (Building 45)
Bethesda, MD 20892
United States

Organizer
NHLBI and NIBIB