Plain-English translation of NCT07079592 on ClinicalTrials.gov ↗ · Source last updated · Translation generated · How we translate trials
This study doesn't follow the usual testing phases — it may be an observational study or a different type of research.
Pulmonary hypertension—high blood pressure in the lungs—is often missed because it can have many different causes. This trial is testing whether an artificial intelligence system that analyzes your heart's electrical activity (called an electrocardiogram or ECG) can reliably detect early signs of elevated lung blood pressure. The AI system has shown promise in identifying people at risk before symptoms appear.
Doctors often discover lung blood pressure problems too late, when patients are already quite sick. This trial exists to see whether this new AI-powered heart tracing can catch the problem much earlier, so people can get treatment sooner and avoid serious heart and lung complications.
You likely qualify if…
You likely don't qualify if…
You will have a heart tracing (ECG) taken, which is quick and painless. Depending on which group you're assigned to, the AI system may flag you as higher risk, in which case you would receive a heart ultrasound to confirm whether you have lung blood pressure problems. Otherwise, your care will continue as usual with your doctor. The study involves about 8,666 participants total and is currently recruiting.
AI-generated summary from trial data · Jun 5, 2026 · Not medical advice
Taiwan
Sponsor
National Defense Medical Center, Taiwan
Enrollment target
~8,666 participants
Started
February 2026
Primary completion
June 2026
Age range
50 Years – 85 Years
Last updated on clinicaltrials.gov in February 2026.
Reach out to the team running this trial. Response times vary — some teams are faster than others.
Central contact
Chin Lin, Associate Professor
National Defense Medical Center, Taiwan
Tell us you're interested and we'll help connect you with the research team. We'll walk you through what to expect first — no email needed to get started.