|
Biodesix, Inc. Announces Breakthrough In Molecular Diagnostics For Lung Cancer
STEAMBOAT SPRINGS, Colo., June 7 -- Biodesix, Inc.
announced today the publication of positive results from a clinical study
that provides additional information to oncologists treating non-small cell
lung cancer (NSCLC). In the study published today in the current issue of
the Journal of the National Cancer Institute (1), a diagnostic from
Biodesix was able to separate patients into groups with statistically
different prognoses when receiving second-line treatment using inhibitors
to the epidermal growth factor receptor (EGFR) such as gefitinib (Iressa,
AstraZeneca) and erlotinib (Tarceva, OSI/Genentech/Roche). Biodesix's
product, VeriStrat, is a simple blood test, and is the first mass
spectrometry diagnostic that uses multiple markers and which has been shown
to be clinically reproducible.
According to the American Cancer Society it is estimated that more than
213,000 new lung cancers will be diagnosed in 2007, about 80% of which will
be NSCLC. The significant clinical challenge addressed by the study is the
fact that EGFR-TKI drugs work well in a relatively small sub-set of NSCLC
patients and have increased quality-of life in a much larger subset
compared to the standard chemotherapy regimen. However, there has not been
a simple, effective method to predicatively indicate how patients may
respond to these drugs. The study validates that Biodesix's proprietary
methods and tools can inform the decision-making process of oncologists and
ultimately improve patient outcomes and avoid ineffective and costly
therapy for patients not likely to benefit from targeted drugs.
"We were pleased to have the opportunity to participate in and
contribute to this ground breaking study," said David Brunel, Biodesix's
Executive Chairman. "Our near term objective is to make VeriStrat available
for general use by oncologists to support their decision making process as
they deal with NSCLC patients. We believe that VeriStrat can become useful
in clinical decision making relative to the use of EGFR-TKI drugs for NSCLC
patients and represents a significant commercial opportunity for Biodesix.
Additionally, we are working on other opportunities in cancer and other
degenerative diseases where the Biodesix methods and tools could contribute
to improvements in patient care and treatment outcomes."
The JNCI publication, jointly authored by scientists from Biodesix,
University of Colorado Health Sciences Center, Denver, and
Vanderbilt-Ingram Cancer Center, Nashville, and international collaborators
in Italy and Japan, describes the development, and subsequent validation on
two retrospective clinical studies where the resulting analysis of mass
spectrometry data resulted in a diagnostic method that may, as the authors
write, "help to identify high-risk patients [that] could reduce rates of
both over treatment and under treatment and improve survival for NSCLC
patients."
According to Dr. Heinrich Roder, Chief Science Officer at Biodesix,
"Molecular diagnostics using mass spectrometry has had some false starts in
the past. At Biodesix, we have spent the last several years developing a
set of tools and methods that we believe lead the field. This publication,
and the strong validation it provides, is representative of what our
platform can do and, as indicated in the study's conclusion demonstrates
that MALDI MS can assist in the pre-treatment selection of subgroups of
NSCLC patients who are likely to show improved survival after treatment
with EGFR-TKIs."
Roder also pointed out, echoing the comments in an editorial by Ming
Tsao and Francis Shepherd (2) in the same JNCI issue, that further
validation was necessary and that the Company was actively in engaged in
preparing further prospective clinical trials. Nonetheless, Tsao and
Shepherd noted "this study represents an important milestone in the
development of serum-based biomarkers for predicting NSCLC outcomes."
Citations
1. Taguchi F, Solomon B, Gregorc V, Roder H, Gray R, Kasahara K, et al.
Mass Spectrometry to Classify Non - Small-Cell Lung Cancer Patients
for Clinical Outcome After Treatment With Epidermal Growth Factor
Receptor Tyrosine Kinase Inhibitors: A Multicohort
Cross-Institutional Study. J Natl Cancer Inst 2007; 99: 838-846.
2. Editorial: Tsao MS, Liu G, Shepherd FA. Serum Proteomic Classifier for
Predicting Response to Epidermal Growth Factor Receptor Inhibitor
Therapy: Have We Built a Better Mousetrap? J Natl Cancer Inst 2007;
99: 826-827
About Biodesix (http://www.biodesix.com)
Biodesix is a pioneer in enabling personalized medicine using mass
spectrometry based molecular diagnostics. By rapidly and cost-effectively
analyzing the concurrent presence of markers of many proteins in patient
samples, Biodesix's clinically proven products improve the ability of
physicians to provide treatment tailored specifically to the patient.
Biodesix's scientists are applying its unique and proprietary data analysis
techniques to isolate signatures which can help in disease management,
pharmacokinetic profiling, patient stratification and choice of patient
therapy. Biodesix is a life sciences company founded in 2005 by several
former senior pharmaceutical executives and key scientists to solve the
challenges of simple and reproducible mass spectroscopy data analysis of
biological materials.
Iressa is a trademark of AstraZeneca and Tarceva is a trademark of OSI
Pharmaceuticals. VeriStrat is a trade mark of Biodesix.
Biodesix offers analysis and consultative services for clients wanting to evaluate our services or have
specific proteomics mass spectrometry analysis performed by our world class experts.
Projects are confidential and cost effective utilizing Biodesix’s proprietary platform.
|