Circle CVI details how to tackle cardiovascular imaging fragmentation with a unified platform

Circle Cardiovascular Imaging develops software for cardiovascular image analysis. The company aims to provide a single platform for imaging post-processing with its cvi42 platform, which turns fragmented workflows into a unified, scalable engine for clinical, technical and operational performance. The company explains the benefits of this approach: “The best of breed approach sounds appealing – you pick the perfect tool for every modality. However, it creates friction at every layer. Complex integrations, security management and user experience gaps between multiple vendors erode efficiency. A single cardiovascular platform consolidates these functions, so you optimise once and benefit everywhere.”
Circle CVI says that, for IT and operations teams, a unified platform delivers one architecture to secure and monitor; one connection for PACS/VNA, EMR, DICOM, HL7 and reporting interfaces; tested deployment patterns and stable turnaround times across MRI and CT; and streamlined support through a single vendor. For users and department leaders, benefits include a consistent workspace across MRI, CT, structural heart and EP; shared AI-driven tools that behave the same for any case; and standardised protocols and reports supporting collaboration and guideline adherence.
“This consistency reduces variation, simplifies cross coverage and creates clearer levers to improve throughput and quality,” the company continues. “Consolidating onto one platform isn’t zero effort. Migration, data mapping and user training take planning. Decision makers often worry about vendor dependence or short-term disruption. Yet these are finite risks while the costs of staying fragmented compound every year. ”
Published on page 8 of the April 2026 issue of RAD Magazine.


