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BD Launches Next Generation Hemodynamic Monitoring Solution Providing Clinicians with AI-Driven Clinical Decision Support

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HemoSphere Alta™ Advanced Monitoring Platform with Predictive, Smart Algorithms Helps Clinicians Proactively Address Instability in Blood Flow and Pressure in Critical Situations

FRANKLIN LAKES, N.J., April 21, 2025 /PRNewswire/ -- BD (Becton, Dickinson and Company) (NYSE: BDX), a leading global medical technology company, has launched a new advanced hemodynamic monitoring platform with predictive, artificial intelligence (AI) based algorithms that can help clinicians proactively address blood pressure instability and optimize blood flow to help avoid potential life-threatening situations during procedures.

The HemoSphere Alta™ platform is BD's most advanced hemodynamic monitoring technology.
The HemoSphere Alta™ platform is BD's most advanced hemodynamic monitoring technology.

HemoSphere Alta™ platform is the company's most advanced hemodynamic monitoring technology available and is the first major product launch from the Advanced Patient Monitoring business since its acquisition by BD. The new product advances BD's leadership in smart, connected care technologies that use clinical data and AI to help clinicians improve patient outcomes and optimize clinical workflows.

One of the key innovations is the new Cerebral Autoregulation Index (CAI), a first-of-its-kind parameter that indicates whether the brain is likely to maintain stable blood flow despite changes in blood pressure and offers personalized insights into a patient's blood pressure requirements. Clinicians can access CAI when using a noninvasive ForeSight IQ™ Sensor, placed on the patient's forehead, combined with an Acumen IQ ™ Sensor, connected to the patient's arterial line. The HemoSphere Alta™ platform also includes the Acumen Hypotension Prediction Index (HPI)™ software that predicts when a patient could have a low blood pressure event, which has been demonstrated to reduce the depth, duration and severity of hypotension in several large multicenter studies.

"Research over the past two decades has demonstrated the wide variability of the lower limit of cerebral blood flow autoregulation between individuals, as well as the risk for patient morbidity and mortality when blood pressure is maintained below this threshold," said Dr. Charles Hogue, chairman of the Department of Anesthesiology at Northwestern University Feinberg School of Medicine in Chicago. "The availability of the novel Cerebral Autoregulation Index provides clinicians with a tool to detect conditions of impaired autoregulation and can help identify a patient's lower limit of autoregulation. This, in combination with Hypotension Prediction Index technology and other advanced software and algorithms on the HemoSphere Alta™ platform allows us to both customize and predict patients' low blood pressure."