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5 min read·Updated July 2, 2026

Cleerly

Cleerly logoBy Cleerly

Cleerly is an AI coronary-CT analysis platform that quantifies and characterizes arterial plaque (AI-guided quantitative CT) to assess heart-disease risk directly from imaging — FDA-cleared and reaching a mainstream reimbursement milestone with a Category I CPT code effective January 2026.

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Learning Objectives

  • Understand what Cleerly measures from coronary CT and why it matters
  • Distinguish Cleerly's plaque-characterization approach from HeartFlow's blood-flow analysis
  • Evaluate the significance of the 2026 reimbursement milestone

What Is Cleerly?

Cleerly is a cardiovascular-AI company that analyzes coronary CT angiography scans to quantify and characterize atherosclerotic plaque — the buildup in the heart's arteries that causes most heart attacks. Its approach, AI-guided quantitative CT, measures how much plaque a patient has and what type it is — for example, distinguishing higher-risk non-calcified plaque from stable calcified plaque. The goal is to move heart-disease assessment away from indirect risk scores and toward a direct, image-based picture of the disease actually present in a given patient's arteries.

Cleerly is distinct from catalogued HeartFlow, and the contrast is worth understanding. HeartFlow's flagship analysis models blood flow (a computed measure of whether a narrowing is functionally significant), while Cleerly focuses on characterizing the plaque itself. In 2026 Cleerly reached an important commercial milestone: a Category I CPT code effective January 2026, along with coverage from Medicare and major commercial payers. A dedicated reimbursement code is a strong signal that AI plaque analysis is moving from novel technology into mainstream cardiology practice — historically the point at which adoption accelerates.

💡Key Concept

Direct disease measurement: Traditional risk scores estimate heart-attack risk from indirect factors (age, cholesterol, blood pressure). Cleerly instead measures the plaque in a patient's own arteries from a CT scan — a shift from estimating risk to observing disease.

📝Note

Cleerly versus HeartFlow: Both analyze coronary CT, but they measure different things. HeartFlow computes blood flow to judge whether a narrowing limits flow; Cleerly quantifies and characterizes the plaque itself. They can be complementary views of the same disease.

Tip

Visit Cleerly: cleerlyhealth.com — used by cardiology practices and health systems.

Pricing

Cleerly is billed as a clinical service tied to coronary-CT analysis. The January 2026 Category I CPT code and payer coverage mean the analysis is increasingly reimbursed through standard medical billing rather than sold as software.

Per-Analysis (Reimbursed)Category I CPT code
  • AI-guided plaque quantification
  • Medicare and commercial coverage
  • Effective January 2026
Health-System DeploymentCustom
  • Integration with cardiology workflow
  • Reporting and analytics
  • Enterprise agreement

Core Features

Plaque Quantification

Measures the total burden of atherosclerotic plaque from a coronary CT scan, turning a qualitative read into a quantified assessment.

Plaque Characterization

Distinguishes plaque types — including higher-risk non-calcified plaque — to give a more nuanced picture of risk than a single narrowing percentage.

Direct Disease Assessment

Provides an image-based view of the coronary disease actually present, complementing or challenging indirect risk scores.

Reimbursed Clinical Pathway

With a Category I CPT code and payer coverage from January 2026, the analysis fits into standard clinical billing, easing adoption in routine cardiology.

Strengths

  • Direct, quantified plaque measurement — observes disease rather than estimating risk
  • Plaque characterization — flags higher-risk non-calcified plaque, not just narrowing
  • Reimbursement milestone — Category I CPT code and payer coverage from January 2026
  • Distinct from flow analysis — a complementary view to HeartFlow's approach
  • Mainstreaming signal — moving from novel technology toward routine practice

Limitations and Considerations

  • Requires a coronary CT scan — value depends on appropriate imaging being done
  • Clinical impact depends on action — measurement matters only if it changes management
  • Adoption still building — reimbursement is new and practice patterns are evolving
  • One view of the disease — plaque characterization complements, not replaces, other assessments
  • Interpretation in context — results inform, but do not dictate, cardiology decisions

Best Use Cases

Use CaseWhy Cleerly FitsCaveat
Characterizing coronary diseaseQuantifies and types arterial plaqueRequires a coronary CT scan
Refining heart-attack riskDirect image-based assessment vs indirect scoresValue depends on changing management
Cardiology practices adopting AI-QCTReimbursed pathway from January 2026Adoption patterns still forming
Complementing flow analysisPlaque view alongside HeartFlow's flow viewTwo complementary measurements

Key Takeaways

  • Cleerly analyzes coronary CT angiography to quantify and characterize atherosclerotic plaque using AI-guided quantitative CT
  • It measures the disease directly from imaging, shifting from indirect risk scores toward an image-based picture of a patient's arteries
  • It is distinct from HeartFlow: Cleerly characterizes the plaque itself, while HeartFlow models blood flow — often complementary
  • A Category I CPT code effective January 2026, with Medicare and commercial coverage, signals movement into mainstream cardiology
  • Its clinical value depends on the assessment actually changing patient management; adoption is still building

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