Growing up in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil, Daniel Chamié, MD, PhD, assistant professor of medicine (cardiovascular medicine), was immersed early in the world of interventional cardiology thanks to his father, a renowned interventional cardiologist in the structural and congenital heart diseases.
“The cath lab was a place full of energy and innovation, and rapidly became a joyful and familiar environment,” says Chamié. “Interventional cardiology became a passion that led me to pursue a career in medicine.”
After completing medical school and internal medicine and cardiology residencies, Chamié began training in interventional cardiology. Early in his training, he became fascinated by the information that intravascular imaging could provide compared to standard angiograms.
“I realized there was so much more I could see through intravascular imaging than just a regular angiogram,” says Chamié. “I decided I needed deeper knowledge in intravascular imaging because it would help me better understand the diseases I was treating, refine my technique, and ultimately be a better operator.”
Motivated by this vision, Chamié started studying intravascular imaging by himself by reading textbooks, reviewing thousands of cases from his hospital in São Paulo, Brazil, and seeking the opinion and guidance of senior colleagues. After completing his training, he moved to Ohio for a two-year research fellowship on optical coherence tomography (OCT), which, at the time, was a novel intravascular imaging modality with a higher resolution than ultrasound.
“It turned out to be a lucky moment, because after I had some clinical experience with this technology in my country, the U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA) cleared it for use here in the U.S.,” says Chamié. “At the time, many physicians in the U.S. were unfamiliar with the technology, but with my hands-on experience, I was able to share the practicalities and techniques for adequate image acquisition and develop methodologies to help us better analyze and interpret those images.”
After finishing his training, Chamié returned to Brazil, where he spent a decade using his imaging expertise to perform coronary interventions, continually increasing the complexity of his cases. A research organization in Brazil invited him to establish and run an OCT core lab for research to develop new methodologies to improve the analysis of diseases and treatments, which he conducted in parallel with his clinical activities.
“It was an ideal situation, because I could create new analytical methods in the core lab and develop research initiatives based on what I observed in practice, leading to valuable research advancements,” he says.