GRAIL Advances the Galleri® Registrational Clinical Trial Program

On July 15, 2024 GRAIL, Inc. (NASDAQ: GRAL), a healthcare company whose mission is to detect cancer early when it can be cured, reported an update on the PATHFINDER 2 and NHS-Galleri registrational clinical trials evaluating the Galleri multi-cancer early detection (MCED) test (Press release, Grail, JUL 15, 2024, View Source [SID1234644877]). GRAIL has completed the PATHFINDER 2 study’s planned enrollment of more than 35,000 participants who are eligible for guideline-recommended cancer screening at more than 30 healthcare institutions in North America. In addition, GRAIL has completed the third and final round of study visits for the NHS-Galleri trial, which enrolled more than 140,000 participants.

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"The PATHFINDER 2 and NHS-Galleri studies will significantly expand our existing clinical validation and performance evidence for the Galleri test. By supplementing our robust clinical evidence program with more than 35,000 participants in the U.S. for PATHFINDER 2 and over 140,000 participants in England for NHS-Galleri, we will continue our generation of additional performance, safety, and clinical utility data," said Bob Ragusa, Chief Executive Officer at GRAIL. "Both studies were designed to enroll a diverse participant population, representative of socio-economic, ethnicity, gender and age differences, and we are proud of the diversity of the study populations. The data from these studies, as well as supplemental data from our other clinical studies, will support our premarket approval application submission for Galleri to the FDA, which is currently in process with a modular submission under a Breakthrough Device Designation from the FDA. We look forward to seeing results from the first 25,000 individuals enrolled in the PATHFINDER 2 study in the second half of 2025 and final results from the NHS-Galleri trial in 2026."

About the PATHFINDER 2 Study (NCT05155605)
PATHFINDER 2 is a prospective, multi-center, interventional study evaluating the safety and performance of Galleri in a population of individuals aged 50 years and older who are eligible for guideline-recommended cancer screening in the United States. PATHFINDER 2 is being conducted pursuant to an FDA-approved investigational device exemption (IDE) application and began enrolling in December 2021. The primary objectives of the study are 1) to evaluate the safety and effectiveness of GRAIL’s MCED test based on the number and type of diagnostic evaluations performed in participants who receive a cancer signal detected test result, and 2) to evaluate the performance of GRAIL’s MCED test across various measures, including positive predictive value (PPV), negative predictive value (NPV), sensitivity, specificity, and cancer signal origin (CSO) prediction accuracy. Participants who receive a cancer signal detected result undergo additional diagnostic testing based on the predicted CSO to determine if a cancer is present. Secondary objectives include utilization of guideline-recommended cancer screening procedures after use of the MCED test, and participant reported outcomes (PRO) over several time points, including an assessment of participants’ anxiety and satisfaction with the MCED test. Timepoints for collection will include baseline measurement prior to testing, post-results, and post-diagnostic resolution for positive test results.

The PATHFINDER 2 study is being conducted with leading healthcare institutions across the United States, including Cleveland Clinic, Duke University Health System, Flushing Hospital Medical Center, Henry Ford Health System, Hoag, Inova, Jamaica Hospital Medical Center, Kelsey-Seybold Clinic, Mayo Clinic, Morehouse School of Medicine, Ochsner Health, Oregon Health & Science University, Sarah Cannon, Sutter Health, University of Oklahoma, University of Pittsburgh, Virginia Commonwealth University, Weill Cornell Medicine, and others.

About the NHS-Galleri Trial (NCT05611632)
In 2020, NHS England selected GRAIL to assist with the United Kingdom’s ambitions for early cancer detection and to assess Galleri for potential population screening on a national scale. In 2021, we initiated the NHS-Galleri trial, a fully enrolled prospective randomized controlled clinical utility trial of over 140,000 participants between the ages of 50 and 77 at the time of enrollment, to evaluate the implementation of Galleri alongside the existing NHS standard of care screenings. The primary objective of the trial is to assess whether implementation of Galleri can reduce the incidence of late-stage cancers through early cancer detection. The trial aimed to enroll a representative population sample to promote health equity and was fully enrolled in just over 10 months.

The trial is designed for participants to provide three blood draws over a two-year period, with the first draw taken at enrollment. As a randomized controlled trial, half of the trial participants have received the Galleri test, and half have had their blood sample stored for future analysis. Any participant in the interventional arm with a cancer signal detected result has been referred for further diagnostic workup within the NHS. All other participants and their physicians remain blinded as to which arm of the study they are in. The NHS-Galleri trial design was published in Cancers in 2022.

Collaborators include Queen Mary University of London, King’s College London Cancer Prevention Trials Unit, and NHS England.