CardioBench: Do Echocardiography Foundation Models Generalize Beyond the Lab?

Abstract

Foundation models are reshaping medical imaging, yet their application in echocardiography remains limited, hindered by a heavy reliance on private datasets that prevent reproducible comparison. Echocardiography poses unique challenges, including noisy acquisitions, high frame redundancy, and limited diverse public datasets. To address this, we introduce CardioBench, a comprehensive benchmark for echocardiography foundation models. Specifically, CardioBench unifies eight publicly available datasets into a standardized suite spanning four regression and five classification tasks, covering functional, structural, diagnostic, and view recognition endpoints. Leveraging this framework, we evaluate several leading foundation models, including cardiac-specific, biomedical, and general-purpose encoders, under consistent zero-shot, probing, and alignment protocols. Our analysis reveals that while general-purpose encoders transfer well and often close the gap with probing, they struggle significantly with fine-grained distinctions like view classification and subtle pathology recognition. Results indicate that models capturing temporal cardiac dynamics perform best on functional tasks, while retrieval-based approaches generalize more consistently across datasets. By releasing preprocessing, splits, and public evaluation pipelines, CardioBench establishes a reproducible reference point to guide the architectural design of future echocardiography and possibly other medical imaging foundation models.

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