August 12, 2008 - Evolving standards in cardiovascular (CV) care have produced the need for a multimodality image management platform that integrates patient images and related information, according to a recent analysis from Frost & Sullivan, “North American Cardiovascular Image Management Systems (CV-PACS) Markets.”

The report states providers of CV image management systems (CV-PACS) appear set to benefit from this growing need as their products integrate radiology and nuclear cardiology, and offer more advanced structured reporting capabilities. Although most cath and echo labs in North America have adopted digital X-ray technology, digital echo, or analog to digital converters, the image data from these core modalities are often managed independently. The report found this causes their respective workflows to remain disparate, thereby offering many opportunities in the CV-PACS markets to replace stand-alone solutions with multimodality platforms.

“Currently, single-modality image management solutions supporting each type of lab constitute silos of information, which prevents the exchange of information with other systems in order to create a unified view of the patient,” said Frost & Sullivan Industry Analyst Nadim Daher. “By consolidating image management for several modalities onto a single platform, multimodality solutions can aid the formation of a single integrated system, and enable the use of advanced workstations that support the new standards of cardiovascular care.”

To find optimum uptake, the novel CV-PACS technology must be capable of replacing and/or integrating with the legacy infrastructure in cath and echo labs. Meanwhile, labs are encouraged to share common grounds with nuclear imaging and radiology by deploying enterprise-wide image management systems.

Additionally, cardiology IT systems have to show further integration and inter-operability to consolidate images from various sources and other enterprise systems. As such, they play a central role as integration platforms for larger facilities to help develop patient-centric CV care processes and records, the report states.

While offering novel capabilities and integrated solutions, CV image management system vendors will have to strategize in order to deal with the increasing levels of competition and more complex sales cycles, the report states. New business plans are crucial, as they must deliver on several fronts to help customers meet mounting challenges. Vendors must pay greater attention when assisting customers with improving productivity and departmental efficiencies, by helping them support higher imaging procedure volumes while simultaneously reducing costs and turnaround times.

Apart from using these product capabilities to attract larger contract opportunities, vendors must also educate prospective customers about the benefits of enterprise-wide systems. Specifically, they should proactively help customers overcome political restraints, align the incentives of enterprise stakeholders, and cater to every CV sub-specialty. Additionally, vendors need to give top priority to service due to the complexity of their solutions.

“While CV-PACS solutions are much less hardware-based than in the past, they offer more sophisticated software components and require a larger professional service component,” notes Daher. “The CV-PACS market is fast becoming more service-oriented, thereby challenging vendors to increase profit margins by providing cost effective implementation and support services to a growing customer base.”

The report is part of the Medical Imaging Growth Partnership Service program, which also includes research in the following markets: cardiovascular X-ray imaging equipment, medical ultrasound imaging, CT imaging equipment, MRI, SPECT and SPECT-CT, PET and PET-CT, computed and digital radiography (CR, DR), radiology picture archiving and communication systems (PACS), computer-aided detection and diagnosis (CAD), and medical displays.

The report also finds the market earned revenues of $272 million in 2007 and estimates this to reach $670 million in 2014.

For more information: www.frost.com.


Related Content

News | HIMSS

March 9, 2026 — Fujifilm Healthcare Americas Corp. is showcasing how its latest AI-powered enterprise imaging solutions ...

Time March 10, 2026
arrow
Feature | Information Technology | Dhruv Chopra

Radiology is a cornerstone of modern medical diagnostics, but today it stands at an inflection point. Pressures ...

Time February 24, 2026
arrow
News | Enterprise Imaging

Feb. 12, 2026 — Agfa HealthCare continued its strong business momentum across the U.S. market, as health systems expand ...

Time February 20, 2026
arrow
News | RSNA 2025

Nov. 27, 2025— AdvaHealth Solutions is highlighting AdvaPACS, its cloud-native and AI-forward imaging platform at RSNA ...

Time November 29, 2025
arrow
News | Breast Imaging

Oct. 28, 2025 — QT Imaging Holdings, Inc., a medical device company focused on radiation-free imaging technology, has ...

Time October 28, 2025
arrow
News | PACS

Aug. 26, 2025 — Core Sound Imaging, the company behind the widely established Studycast medical imaging workflow ...

Time August 26, 2025
arrow
News | Digital Pathology

Aug. 12, 2025 — Fujifilm Healthcare Americas Corp. has announced that a leading health system with hospital sites ...

Time August 12, 2025
arrow
Sponsored Content | Case Study | PACS

eHealth Saskatchewan plays a vital role in providing IT services to patients, health care providers, and partners such ...

Time February 03, 2025
arrow
News | Artificial Intelligence

Dec. 17, 2024 — Radin Health, a provider of advanced radiology AI-Powered solutions, highlighted its All-in-One ...

Time December 18, 2024
arrow
Videos | Information Technology

Industry trade shows and conferences seem to be making their comeback in 2024. And the Healthcare Information and ...

Time July 25, 2024
arrow
Subscribe Now