Treadwell Announces Initiation of Expansion Cohorts in Ongoing Phase 1 Study of Oral TTK Inhibitor, CFI-402257, in Patients with Breast Cancer and Additional Solid Tumors

On August 27, 2020 Treadwell Therapeutics, a clinical-stage biotechnology company developing novel therapeutics for highly aggressive cancers, reported the initiation of three expansion cohorts in its ongoing Phase 1 study evaluating CFI-402257, a selective and highly potent oral inhibitor of tyrosine threonine kinase (TTK) (Press release, Treadwell Therapeutics, AUG 27, 2020, View Source [SID1234564114]). The expansion cohorts include ER+/HER2 breast cancer patients in combination with fulvestrant post CDK4/6 inhibitor failure, triple negative breast cancer patients and an additional cohort in solid tumors.

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"CFI-402257 is a potentially best-in-class, highly selective and potent inhibitor of TTK, a critical component of the cancer cell’s maintenance of genomic integrity and survival, which may be a key vulnerability of tumors that are resistant to CDK4/6 inhibitors," said Dr. Mark Bray, Treadwell Chief Scientific Officer and Co-Founder. "We are very encouraged by the compelling early signs of clinical activity of CFI-402257 as a monotherapy in the dose escalation portion of our Phase 1 study, and we look forward to continuing to evaluate the potential of our TTK inhibitor in combination therapy through our expansion cohorts."

"Patients with ER+/Her2- breast cancer face a high unmet medical need, as a majority of these patients become resistant to CDK4/6 inhibitors. We are very pleased by the initial indications of clinical activity in this patient segment and are excited to advance to the next phase of the study to evaluate the potential of CFI-402257 as a treatment for these patients," said Philippe Bedard, M.D., Princess Margaret Cancer Centre, primary investigator of the study.

The open-label Phase 1 trial of CFI-402257 is designed to assess the safety, tolerability, pharmacokinetics, and clinical benefit of treatment with CFI-402257. The study consists of two parts, the dose escalation portion, now completed, in which escalating doses were administered orally in patients with advanced cancer that was refractory to current treatment or for which no curative therapy exists. The dose expansion portion of the multi-center trial will enroll up to 52 patients across sites in Canada in three parallel arms: patients with ER+/HER2-negative breast cancer who have failed CDK4/6 inhibitors in combination with an approved endocrine treatment (fulvestrant); patients with triple negative breast cancer (TNBC); and patients with advanced solid tumors. Dr. Philippe Bedard of the Princess Margaret Cancer Centre is the primary investigator, and Dr. John Hilton (Ottawa Hospital Cancer Center) and Dr. Daniel Renouf (British Columbia Cancer Agency) are co-investigators of the study.

CFI-402257 is a potentially best-in-class inhibitor of TTK protein kinase. TTK is a dual-specificity serine-threonine kinase that is critical for the spindle assembly checkpoint (SAC), chromosome alignment and error correction. Inhibition of TTK kinase activity causes cells to prematurely exit mitosis with unattached chromosomes, resulting in severe chromosome missegregation, aneuploidy and eventually cell death. TTK is overexpressed in several tumors, and higher levels correlate with worse prognosis, and may contribute to the survival and proliferation of aneuploid cells. During initial preclinical screening studies, CFI-402257 demonstrated a desirable combination of potent inhibition of cancer cell growth and high oral bioavailability with robust suppression of tumour growth achieved upon at tolerated doses in in vivo studies.

Median Technologies: Financial Communications Schedule for the Second Half Of 2020

On August 27, 2020 Median Technologies (Paris:ALMDT), The Imaging Phenomics Company, reported the publication date for its half year results 2020 (Press release, MEDIAN Technologies, AUG 27, 2020, View Source [SID1234564113]):

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Publication

Date

2020 half year results

October 14, 2020*

CURE Media Group Announces Finalists for 2020 Extraordinary Healer® Award for Oncology Nursing

On August 27, 2020 CURE Media Group, the industry-leading multimedia platform devoted to cancer updates and research that reaches more than 1 million patients, reported the three finalists for the 2020 Extraordinary Healer Award for Oncology Nursing and the winner of the 2020 The Finest Hour award (Press release, CURE Media Group, AUG 27, 2020, View Source [SID1234564112]).

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This year’s celebration, which will be held in a virtual format, recognizes exceptional nurses for their efforts in the oncology community. The Finest Hour, an award to honor the selfless achievements of an extraordinary nurse working to provide care during the COVID-19 pandemic, also will be presented.

This year’s finalists for the Extraordinary Healer award are:

Vicki Dodson, B.S.N., RN, OCN, has 36 years of nursing experience. She works as an oncology nurse navigator at Providence Sacred Heart Medical Center in Spokane, Washington. Dodson takes time to listen to patients expressing their fears and frustrations and helps them figure out the confusing health care system, educating them on the treatments and therapies they will be receiving. She recently volunteered to run a cancer support group that had lost its facilitator, in addition to the many other organizations she supports. Dodson credits her career in nursing to her love of people and the ever-everchanging research and treatment.
Maria Rodriguez, B.S.N., RN, is a nurse navigator at the cancer center at Temple University Hospital in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. Rodriguez looks beyond patients’ diagnoses and tries to soothe the spirit in addition to treating the illness. She is bilingual and became a dual-role medical interpreter for Spanish-speaking patients. Rodriguez made the cancer center’s holiday food drive more inclusive for Hispanic families and spearheaded the center’s Feliz Navidad celebration. Her inspiration for becoming a nurse was her grandmother, who always told her that she had healing hands and to share them with others who were suffering because of an illness.
Christie Santure, B.S.N., RN, OCN, is an infusion nurse at UPMC Hillman Cancer Center in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania. Santure launched a Caring for the Caregiver program at UPMC, a support group for those who are caring for someone undergoing cancer treatment. She offers sessions twice a month at Hillman Cancer Center and is working with leadership to start the program at other UPMC locations. Santure started as a candy-striper and has been a nurse for 40 years. She aspires to walk in the shoes of the nurses before her who inspired her journey.
The winner of the Finest Hour award is Elizabeth Farrat, B.S.N., RN, CCRN-K. Farrat works as a perioperative nurse liaison in the operating room at Memorial Sloan Kettering (MSK) Cancer Center in New York City. Prior to her current role, Farrat worked in the intensive care unit (ICU) at MSK for 10 years, where she helped design and facilitate the ICU orientation trajectory, ICU preceptor expectations and workflow. In addition, she helped create an ICU Teaching the Teacher Continuing Education Program for ICU preceptors. Farrat also was a palliative care unit champion and is an end-of-life nursing education consortium critical care trainer. During the COVID-19 surge in New York, Farrat was redeployed to the ICU to care for patients who were critically ill with the virus. She helped implement the real-time, critical-care training of step-down registered nurses so that they were able to provide ICU care.

"Each of these nurses has demonstrated incredible compassion, expertise and helpfulness in caring for their patients," said Mike Hennessy Jr., president, and CEO of MJH Life Sciences, parent company of CURE Media Group. "They have gone above and beyond their call of duty during this difficult time, and we look forward to shining a light on them for their tremendous efforts."

The 2020 Extraordinary Healer Award for Oncology Nursing virtual celebration will take place Thursday, Sept. 17.

For more information on the winners and to register to attend, click here.

This event is supported by Bristol Myers Squibb and Janssen.

Effectiveness and Efficiency of Targeted Intraoperative Single Dose Radiotherapy for Breast Cancer Patients Confirmed

On August 27, 2020 Carl Zeiss Meditec reported that The use of targeted intraoperative radiotherapy (TARGIT), as a single dose – with ZEISS INTRABEAM – directly after removal of a tumor, has been confirmed as non-inferior, when compared with external beam radiotherapy (EBRT) (Press release, Carl Zeiss, AUG 27, 2020, View Source [SID1234564111]). Within the accuracy of the study, the risk of a local tumor recurrence in the breast is similar and non-breast cancer death is reduced. The TARGIT-A randomized, multi-center phase 3 study involving 2,298 patients with a median patient follow-up time of 8.6 years meets the highest scientific standards.

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Globally, more than 40,000 patients have already been treated, in over 350 breast cancer centers, with the TARGIT method.

"Single dose intraoperative radiotherapy for early stage breast cancer can be a better alternative to conventional whole breast radiotherapy for most patients during primary tumor management," stated the principal investigator Professor Jayant Vaidya, Professor of Surgery and Oncology and Scientific Director at University College London, when presenting the results of the study.

"These excellent results provide real clinical justification for single intraoperative radiation in suitable patients with early breast cancer. It is now essential to develop the corresponding treatment guidelines as soon as possible," added Professor Jeffrey Tobias, Professor of Oncology at University College London and joint initiator of the TARGIT-A study.

Positive clinical study results validate TARGIT as an option in breast cancer treatment

The local, recurrence-free survival rate of women treated with single dose TARGIT is non-inferior when compared with EBRT. The mortality in the TARGIT arm was even lower because of fewer cardiovascular deaths.

"We are delighted with the positive results, as the ZEISS INTRABEAM 600 now represents an outstanding treatment alternative for many patients. We are confident that the procedure can now find its way into everyday clinical practice," said Ludwin Monz, CEO of Carl Zeiss Meditec AG.

TARGIT method underscored as an efficiency-oriented treatment

"This study reflects two decades of interdisciplinary clinical research by leading radiation oncologists, surgeons, physicists and health economists. The TARGIT-A trial has offered many breast cancer patients a treatment that is well-tolerated, effective, convenient and highly cost-efficient," summarized Professor William Small, Professor of Radiation Oncology at Loyola University, Chicago and one of the world’s leading radiation oncologists.

Guided Therapeutics Continues FDA Progress and Schedules Key Meeting to Finalize Clinical Study Protocol for the LuViva® Advanced Cervical Scan

On August 27, 2020 Guided Therapeutics, Inc. (OTCQB: GTHP), the maker of a rapid and painless cervical cancer detection test based on its patented biophotonic technology, reported that it will meet with the FDA to finalize the protocol for its clinical study in support of its Premarketing Application for the LuViva Advanced Cervical Scan (Press release, Guided Therapeutics, AUG 27, 2020, View Source [SID1234564110]). The meeting has been set for October 14, 2020. The FDA already has provided the Company with guidance for drafting the study protocol through useful feedback on the Company’s Pre-submission documents and its previous meeting with the FDA.

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To gear up for the clinical study, the Company is interviewing potential clinical sites. The study plans to enroll patients at four clinical sites that represent a cross section of the U.S. population of women who are screened for cervical cancer. Because of limitations inherent in current imaging technology, as much as 40% to 50% of disease is missed, even with invasive and expensive biopsy. Under the draft protocol submitted to FDA for review, LuViva will be studied to document its ability to detect a significant number of these missed diagnoses. New national guidelines for cervical cancer management published in April of 2020 stress a preferred risk-based approach, a primary feature of LuViva’s AI-based risk profile algorithms.

"Once FDA has completed the review of the study protocol, we intend to begin enrolling patients as soon as practicable," said Gene Cartwright, CEO. "Starting our study will be major milestone for the Company’s plans to commercialize LuViva in the U.S."