Artificial intelligence adoption in French cardiovascular care: a multiprofessional survey of barriers and facilitators

European Heart Journal - Digital Health

13 April 2026
Organised by: Logo
ESC Journals CARDIOVASCULAR NURSING AND ALLIED PROFESSIONS Public Health and Health Economics PREVENTIVE CARDIOLOGY Risk Factors and Prevention

Abstract

AbstractAims

Responsible adoption of artificial intelligence (AI) in cardiology remains uneven. We aimed to map knowledge, attitudes, beliefs and practices among cardiovascular professionals in France and to identify levers for implementation.

Methods and results

We conducted a national multiprofessional survey across cardiovascular care from 4 December 2024 to 1 March 2025. Prespecified outcomes included regular use in practice, confidence in diagnostic outputs, performance expectations, training needs, and social influence. Seven hundred fifty-six professionals completed the survey (58.2% cardiologists, 24.3% allied-health professionals, 17.8% other professionals; median age 37 years; 46.7% women). AI use was reported as regular (≥ weekly) by 23%, occasionally by 40%, and none by 37%; only 7.8% had formal AI training. Use concentrated on AI-assisted imaging (32%) and patient monitoring/management (18%). The most valued benefit was improved diagnostic accuracy (29%); leading concerns were algorithmic bias (29.9%) and data privacy (28.2%). Explainability increased confidence (among cardiologists, high confidence 64% in therapeutic contexts vs. 84% with explanations). In multivariable analyses, prior training (aOR 3.22, 95% CI 1.60–6.55), research involvement (2.94, 1.90–4.58), and male sex (1.64, 1.05–2.59) were associated with higher use, while age > 40 years was associated with lower use (0.62, 0.40–0.96). Allied-health professionals reported lower social influence and training needs.

Conclusion

Adoption of AI in cardiology remains limited, and four levers emerged for responsible scale-up: Training (education), Explainability (transparent outputs), Integration (workflow embedding), and Accompaniment (peer support, evaluation). These priorities should guide education, governance, and procurement strategies.

Contributors

Nabil Bouali
Nabil Bouali

Author

La Miletrie University Hospital Centre Poitiers , France

Guillaume Baudry
Guillaume Baudry

Author

University Hospital of Brabois Nancy , France

Orianne Weizman
Orianne Weizman

Author

European Hospital Georges Pompidou Paris , France

Louis-Marie Desroche
Louis-Marie Desroche

Author

Felix Guyon (Saint Denis) University Hospital Centre St Denis , France

ESC 365 is supported by