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Heart Imaging Technologies’ WebPAX gets U.S. patent for Medical Image Sharing in the Cloud

Heart Imaging TechnologiesDURHAM, N.C. (CitizenWire) — Heart Imaging Technologies, LLC (the "Company" and dba "WebPAX") is pleased to announce that the United States Patent and Trademark Office (USPTO) has granted the Company another key individual patent, further strengthening its patent portfolio relating to zero-footprint technologies necessary to view diagnostic-quality medical images in a standard Internet web browser. The new U.S. Patent Number 7,958,100 covers the use of web browser redirection routing technology to provide efficient and seamless web access to medical images that are stored in different geographic locations.

The Company holds three additional U.S. patents and five patent applications pending, all of which underlie the Company's WebPAX Medical Image Management Systems, a commercialized and FDA-approved technology that enables viewing and analysis of diagnostic-quality medical images in a bare-bones web browser with full PACS capabilities and that seamlessly integrates into EMRs, EHRs and web-portals.

The parent application was filed in 2000. Before allowing the patent USPTO examiners considered thousands of related patents, journal articles, and other publications dating back to 1987, of which 114 were specifically cited. No prior art was found that described how web browser redirection could be used to manage medical images across different hospitals.

"When we filed this patent everyone was focused on using desktop applications for viewing medical images within a single hospital. We were the first to describe how to design a system that provides global access to a distributed database of medical images by leveraging the now-ubiquitous World Wide Web framework," said co-founder Robert M. Judd, Ph.D.

The cloud computing revolution is poised to have a major impact on the healthcare IT market, with the most profound disruptive influence in medical imaging, a $170 billion a year market. Despite the DICOM standard, the medical imaging industry is replete with technical fragmentation, inoperability dysfunction and sharing inefficiencies. Consequently, an estimated $30 billion in the U.S. is spent on unnecessary medical imaging, about $15 billion of which is due to redundant procedures that result from a physician's lack of access to prior imaging exams. The Company's WebPAX technology allows the efficient sharing, viewing and analysis of medical images from any DICOM source (modality or PACS), eliminating the time and cost associated with redundant exams, avoiding excessive radiation exposure for patients and obviating the costs and inefficiencies of shuttling around and managing CDs.

"Customer demand from hospitals, imaging centers, physician practices, payors and ACOs, combined with the availability of Web 2.0 and cloud computing technologies, will make the days of traditional PACS, one-off viewers and extensive infrastructure associated with image management numbered," said Dr. Judd.

The electronic medical record is intended to serve as the sole integration point of all types of medical data in order to provide a cohesive and comprehensive view of the patient. However, despite the critical importance of medical images to the entire longitudinal medical record, integration of images into the EMR has proved elusive for a variety of technical, territorial, cost and work-flow considerations. As a PACS-vendor neutral and web-based architecture, the WebPAX platform complements and maximizes the utility of any existing PACS and EMR/EHR investments by providing zero-footprint access to all medical images and videos through a simple web-link (URL) within a third-party EMR/EHR system that automatically points to the images associated with the specific patient imaging procedure which can be viewed with diagnostic quality from any web-connected computer or device.

"Whether access to images are made available through the EMR, EHR, web portals, PACS-interface and/or cloud-based delivery models, the difficulty lies in providing immediate web-access to images stored in different hospitals or data centers as images accumulate," stated Dr. Judd. "Traditional approaches have required that images are copied from one hospital to another before they can be viewed, which is intrinsically slow, cumbersome and expensive. Our proprietary technology provides that functionality with a single mouse click and this method, which is covered by this newly issued patent, is the most efficient technical approach possible within the framework of World Wide Web technologies."

"This patent places the Company in a unique position and provides protection of our core technology as the scaling of medical images across enterprises and/or within the cloud continues to accelerate. This advancement is important because our patented technology eliminates the need to copy images from one hospital to another by automatically routing the physician's web browser to the hospital where the image is actually stored. As a result, physicians have immediate access to images located at different hospitals or data centers."

As medical imaging moves to the cloud, this patented technology also covers the ability to efficiently provide web browser access to medical images stored in multiple geographic locations, which has important implications for cloud-based and SaaS providers. "Using a single data center to store all images from all hospitals or imaging providers – within a network – is impractical due to the enormous size of medical images. WebPAX's patented technology enables cloud-based providers to utilize multiple, geographically-dispersed data centers while acting as a single information source from the physician's perspective. Our newly issued patent protects the use of web browser redirection in this context of seamless controlled web access routing to medical images stored in different geographic locations."

Founded in 2000 and headquartered near North Carolina's Research Triangle Park, WebPAX provides zero-footprint, web-based medical image management technology and services to health care systems, large hospitals and private clinics as well as drug and device companies sponsoring multi-center clinical trials. Worldwide, WebPAX systems currently provide secure web browser access to over 500 million medical images.

For more information, visit: http://www.heartit.com .

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