In the rapidly evolving landscape of healthcare technology, the pace at which innovative tools are developed often surpasses their adoption, particularly in fields as critical as cardiovascular disease and stroke management. These two conditions remain the leading causes of global mortality, underscoring an urgent need for bridging the gap between technological advancements and real-world clinical application. The American Heart Association® (AHA), renowned for its unwavering commitment to transforming health outcomes worldwide, has long been a catalyst in this endeavor. Recently, the AHA announced the finalists for its eighth annual Health Tech Competition, an event driven by the organization’s Center for Health Technology & Innovation to spotlight breakthrough solutions poised to revolutionize cardiovascular care.
The 2025 Health Tech Competition serves as a pivotal platform where the convergence of scientific rigor and clinical innovation is put under the spotlight. Health technology companies worldwide are invited to demonstrate their products and technologies designed to prevent, diagnose, or treat a range of cardiovascular conditions such as hypertension, stroke, heart failure, and other related disorders. This competition does not merely celebrate new ideas but emphasizes the viability and impact of these solutions in practical healthcare settings, focusing on tangible improvements in patient outcomes.
This year’s cohort of finalists exemplifies a remarkable diversity of technological approaches, each targeting unique aspects of cardiovascular health challenges. Brainomix, based in Oxford, England, utilizes advanced artificial intelligence (AI) algorithms to enhance stroke diagnosis precision and facilitate timely, evidence-based treatment decisions. Through their AI-powered software, they aim to reduce diagnostic ambiguity and accelerate intervention times, which are critical in stroke management where every minute counts.
Complementing this, Cambrian Health from San Francisco leverages AI to construct platforms that ensure the seamless execution of clinical best practices directly at the point of care. Their system focuses on embedding clinical workflows with decision support tools to enhance adherence to treatment protocols, thereby improving overall healthcare quality and consistency.
From Boston, Lumia introduces wearable technologies targeting patients suffering from orthostatic intolerance and chronic blood flow disorders. These wearables are engineered to provide continuous physiological monitoring, delivering real-time data and enabling dynamic patient management outside traditional clinical environments. Such devices hold promise not only in augmenting patient quality of life but also in furnishing clinicians with actionable insights for personalized treatment plans.
Noah Labs, positioned in Berlin, pioneers the transformation of voice signals into digital biomarkers, a novel approach enabling earlier detection of cardiometabolic diseases. This innovative technology harnesses subtle changes in voice patterns linked to underlying physiological and metabolic shifts, presenting a non-invasive and scalable screening method with profound implications for early intervention strategies.
PolyVascular, headquartered in Houston, Texas, is dedicated to developing minimally invasive therapeutic solutions specifically tailored for pediatric patients with congenital heart disease. By focusing on reducing the frequency of open-heart surgeries through innovative catheter-based interventions, PolyVascular aims to significantly improve long-term outcomes and quality of life for affected children.
The finalists will present their innovations live during the American Heart Association’s Scientific Sessions 2025 at the Ernest N. Morial Convention Center in New Orleans. These presentations will be critically evaluated by a distinguished panel of judges, emphasizing the validity of the prototype or product’s functioning in real-world settings, the scientific rigor underpinning the validation studies, and the overall impact on patient outcomes driven by technological innovation.
The evaluation process is meticulous, weighing evidence-based research integration and the ability of the technology to meaningfully shift clinical paradigms. The judging panel comprises a blend of seasoned academic cardiologists, clinical innovators, venture capital experts, and even media personalities extensively involved in cardiovascular advocacy. This diverse expertise ensures a comprehensive assessment reflecting scientific credibility, clinical utility, and market potential.
Aside from monetary or material awards, the winner gains entry to the Center for Health Technology & Innovation’s Innovators’ Network—a consortium designed to foster collaboration among entrepreneurs, clinicians, researchers, and payers. This network offers unprecedented opportunities to collectively overcome practical obstacles in clinical outcome studies, facilitate science-to-technology translation, and generate the robust evidence necessary for widespread clinical adoption and reimbursement success.
Moreover, members of the Innovators’ Network can leverage access to the American Heart Association’s comprehensive digital libraries, containing rigorous, evidence-based scientific guidelines and clinical recommendations essential for guiding the development of digital health technologies. This symbiosis between guideline development and technology advancement exemplifies a forward-thinking approach to healthcare innovation where regulatory and clinical pathways are intertwined.
Robert A. Harrington, M.D., FAHA, a far-reaching leader in cardiovascular medicine and past president of the American Heart Association, reflects on the competition’s broader significance. He stresses that the Center’s mission is not only to accelerate innovation but to foster an ecosystem where these solutions can be rapidly validated, scaled, and integrated into patient care effectively. Through consortium efforts, developers are empowered to tackle some of the most complex challenges in cardiovascular disease by leveraging collective insights and resources.
The Health Tech Competition and the broader Center initiatives are indispensable in addressing systemic barriers that historically delay the translation of cutting-edge research into practical therapies. As cardiovascular diseases continue to claim millions of lives annually, embracing technological innovation while maintaining rigorous scientific validation remains pivotal. This unique synergy between advanced technology, clinical expertise, and supportive networks creates a fertile environment for breakthroughs that could transform the landscape of cardiovascular health.
For those interested in following this transformative journey in cardiovascular innovation, the Health Tech Competition represents a beacon of progress and hope. The finalist showcase at Scientific Sessions 2025 promises to reveal technologies that could redefine cardiovascular diagnostics, monitoring, and treatment paradigms, propelling the field into a new era of precision and patient-centered care. Through initiatives like this, the American Heart Association exemplifies sustained leadership in driving meaningful change, catalyzing technologies that hold the promise of saving countless lives globally.
Subject of Research: Development and evaluation of innovative health technologies targeting cardiovascular and stroke patient outcomes.
Article Title: Bridging Innovation and Practice: The American Heart Association’s 2025 Health Tech Competition Finalists Unveil Next-Gen Cardiovascular Solutions
News Publication Date: November 4, 2025
Web References:
- https://ahahealthtech.org/aha-health-tech-competition-2025
- https://newsroom.heart.org/news/5-health-technology-start-ups-finalists-in-global-heart-disease-solution-competition
References:
- Circulation Journal, AHA official research (https://doi.org/10.1161/cir.0000000000001303)
Keywords: Cardiovascular innovation, heart disease, stroke, artificial intelligence, wearable health tech, digital biomarkers, pediatric cardiology, clinical adoption, health technology competition

