CardioDx Announces Positive Results From Clinical Utility Study Evaluating the Corus(R) CAD Blood Test's Influence on Clinical Decision-Making in the Assessment of Obstructive Coronary Artery Disease in Women

REDWOOD CITY, CA--(Marketwired - Apr 1, 2015) - CardioDx, Inc., a molecular diagnostics company specializing in cardiovascular genomics, today announced the publication of a new study examining the effect of the use of an age, sex, and gene expression score on clinical decision-making and the rate of further cardiac evaluation in symptomatic female patients in the outpatient setting. The study examined the use of the Corus CAD test, a blood test which incorporates age, sex, and gene expression, in 320 women presenting with stable symptoms suggestive of obstructive coronary artery disease (CAD).* The study indicated that women with low Corus CAD test scores ( ≤ 15) were significantly less likely to be referred for further cardiac evaluation (OR 0.013, p < 0.0001) by their primary care clinicians within 45 days of follow-up. Only 4% of women (10/248) with low Corus CAD test scores received further testing for obstructive CAD.

The study, an aggregated analysis of female cohorts from the IMPACT-PCP1 and REGISTRY I2 studies, was recently presented at the American College of Cardiology 64th Annual Scientific Meeting and published online yesterday ahead of the November 2015 print issue of Menopause: The Journal of The North American Menopause Society.3

"Current testing approaches for identifying obstructive CAD have been shown to be less accurate in women than men, and these diagnostic challenges lead to both over-testing of low-risk women and under-testing of high-risk women," said Joseph A. Ladapo, M.D., Ph.D., Assistant Professor of Medicine, Department of Population Health and Medicine, NYU School of Medicine and lead author of the study. "This study demonstrates that incorporating the age, sex, and gene expression score early in the diagnostic pathway, as a part of the patient's clinical assessment, can help clinicians rule-out obstructive CAD in menopausal women presenting with chest pain and other angina symptoms."

The Corus CAD test is the first and only commercially available blood-based test incorporating age, sex, and gene expression measurements that provides a current-state assessment of obstructive CAD in non-diabetic patients presenting with non-acute typical or atypical symptoms. With a 96% negative predictive value,4,7 the Corus CAD test can help clinicians accurately rule out obstructive CAD as the source of their patients' symptoms.

The study included 320 women presenting to 16 primary care providers across 9 practice sites and 6 states. The mean Corus CAD test score was 10.3±8.2, with a range of 1 (corresponding to a 1% likelihood of obstructive CAD) to 38 (corresponding to a 62% likelihood of obstructive CAD). Overall, 77.5% of women (248/320) had low Corus CAD test scores. The referral rate for further cardiac evaluation was 4% (10/248) among women with low Corus CAD test scores versus 83.3% (60/72) among women with elevated scores (p < 0.0001).