Sparking Transformation in Healthcare
egnite is a company with a vision:
to identify and improve outcomes for every cardiovascular patient in the U.S.
Sparking Transformation in Healthcare
egnite is a company with a vision:
to identify and improve outcomes for every cardiovascular patient in the U.S.
The Challenge
Using Big Data to Solve Big Problems
Advancing the Cardiovascular Health of Our Society
egnite is a digital health company leveraging artificial intelligence-driven algorithms and big data to produce business intelligence for healthcare, elevating the role of data in critical decisions.
Our Work
Groundbreaking New Data from the Largest Contemporary Analysis of Valvular Heart Disease Prevalence
Aligned with egnite’s mission to close gaps in structural heart patient care, egnite sponsored a study analyzing over 929,000 de-identified echocardiograms from 35 heart programs to further understand the prevalence of VHD in the U.S.
Brennan JM, Petrescu M, McCarthy P, et al. J Am Coll Cardiol. 2022;79(9_Suppl):1723.
Testimonials
Leading hospitals partner with egnite’s CardioCare platform to reduce variability in care and improve guideline-directed therapy for patients with cardiovascular disease.
Swedish Medical Center
Director of Structural Interventions, Stanford Health Care
Resources
CASE STUDY: Leveraging CardioCare to Get with the Guidelines
Reducing variability in care for this patient population is critical to early identification and improving patient outcomes...
CASE STUDY: Driving Better Outcomes Through Targeted Patient Identification
Reducing variability in care for this patient population is critical to early identification and improving patient outcomes...
What the EARLY TAVR Trial Data Could Mean for Already Busy Heart Teams
On the heels of the exciting EARLY TAVR data and egnite’s Acute Valve Syndrome in Aortic Stenosis study, both led by Dr. Philippe Genereux, we’ve been asked by several cardiovascular (CV) administrators what a potential change in the management of asymptomatic severe aortic stenosis (SAS) patients could mean for their already busy heart teams.