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AviaraDx Confirms That Combination of Two Molecular Biomarkers Improves Prediction of Disease Recurrence in Early Stage Breast Cancer Patients
AviaraDx Confirms That Combination of Two Molecular Biomarkers Improves Prediction of Disease Recurrence in Early Stage Breast Cancer Patients
SAN DIEGO, May 13 /PRNewswire/ -- AviaraDx, Inc. today announced the
publication of an article describing the discovery, development and validation
of a new molecular biomarker, Aviara MGI(SM) (Molecular Grade Index), that
improves the accuracy of breast cancer tumor grading for the prediction of
distant disease recurrence. The authors also report that combining Aviara MGI
with Aviara H/I(SM) (HOXB13:IL17BR), a biomarker previously shown to predict
endocrine benefit, provides superior stratification of recurrence risk. The
article, "A Five-Gene Molecular Grade Index and HOXB13:IL17BR Are
Complementary Prognostic Factors in Early Stage Breast Cancer," appeared in
the May 1, 2008 edition of Clinical Cancer Research.
The Aviara MGI and Aviara H/I ("H over I") biomarkers measure specific,
independent and clinically relevant aspects of tumor biology. According to
the paper published this month, the combination of these markers provides
superior risk stratification as it relates to endocrine benefit and treatment
outcome. After development and testing, the combination was clinically
validated through retrospective analyses of 239 ER-positive, lymph-node
negative patients treated at Massachusetts General Hospital,Boston, MA, and
an independent cohort of 84 patients from John Radcliffe Hospital, Oxford
(UK).
Aviara MGI is a new molecular assay comprising only five genes that are
activated at different cell cycle stages and are involved in invasive tumor
growth. This assay assists pathologists and oncologists by improving the
accuracy of tumor grading.
To predict tumor aggressiveness and a potential response to chemotherapy,
pathologists traditionally evaluate a breast cancer biopsy by light microscopy
and assign a tumor grade. Patients with more aggressive, high grade (Grade 3)
tumors have been shown to derive varying degrees of benefit from chemotherapy,
while patients with less aggressive, low grade (Grade 1) tumors usually derive
no benefit. However, approximately 50 percent of all early stage breast cancer
patients are diagnosed with an intermediate tumor grade (Grade 2). For these
patients the appropriate choice of therapy is unclear. The clinical data
published this month demonstrate that Aviara MGI accurately identifies Grade 1
and 3 tumors, and successfully re-classifies intermediate tumor grade
(Grade 2) into cases with Grade 1-like or Grade 3-like outcomes.
"The importance of accurate tumor grading cannot be understated," said
Dennis C. Sgroi, director of breast pathology at Massachusetts General
Hospital and associate professor of pathology at Harvard Medical School, a
senior author of the article. "A molecular tool such as MGI that can help
separate intermediate-grade tumors into two distinct prognostic groups will go
a long way in stratifying risk and improving treatment selection for breast
cancer patients."
Researchers combined Aviara MGI and Aviara H/I in order to assess the
overall impact of both molecular tumor grade and endocrine therapy benefit on
patient outcome. H/I is a well-established biomarker that has been shown to
predict both recurrence risk and endocrine benefit in more than 2,000 patients
in numerous clinical studies. It assesses the likelihood of a patient to
benefit from endocrine therapy by measuring the functionality of the estrogen
signaling pathway inside the tumor cell itself. As such, H/I goes beyond
conventional estrogen and progesterone receptor (ER/PR) testing. While
patients who are ER/PR positive are assumed to benefit from endocrine therapy,
the therapy fails in approximately 25 percent of those patients.
"Other gene-signature assays developed for breast cancer provide an
improvement over tumor grade as a measure of breast cancer aggressiveness and
likely benefit from chemotherapy. These different proliferation gene
signatures are essentially redundant, and they do not go beyond ER/PR in
determining the likelihood of responding to endocrine therapy," said Antonius
Schuh, PhD, chief executive officer of AviaraDx, Inc. "H/I and MGI together
provide a more complete diagnostic picture that should help clinicians make
more appropriate treatment decisions for their breast cancer patients."
"This is the first analysis linking H/I to our new, five-gene tumor
grading index, MGI," said Mark Erlander, PhD, chief scientific officer for
AviaraDx, Inc. "For patients whose tumors have high MGI values, it is
important to measure H/I in order to determine likely benefit from endocrine
therapy within the setting of a highly proliferating tumor."
The authors conclude that these two markers together should enable
oncologists to identify a large subgroup of women with low risk of recurrence
who may be spared from toxic chemotherapy regimens. In addition, they may
also identify a significant population of patients for whom intensive
chemotherapy regimens or new therapeutic agents should be considered.
"As molecular diagnostics enable the personalization of patient care, we
will help patients and clinicians determine appropriate therapies and avoid
both over- and under-treatment," added Schuh.
Approximately 100,000 women present with ER-positive, node-negative breast
cancer inthe United States every year. The data included in this month's
Clinical Cancer Research publication show that the combination of Aviara MGI
and Aviara H/I provides objective information to better assess both recurrence
risk and potential for response to systemic therapies in these early stage
breast cancer patients. The combination of these two biomarkers is now
commercially available as the Aviara Breast Cancer Index(SM).
About AviaraDx, Inc.
AviaraDx discovers, develops, and commercializes new molecular diagnostic
tests in oncology, enabling physicians to personalize cancer treatment through
better understanding of the molecular biology underlying a patient's tumor.
The company's current offerings include a molecular cancer classification
assay, Aviara CancerTYPE ID(SM) capable of classifying up to 39 tumor types;
Aviara H/I(SM), which predicts endocrine benefit in breast cancer; and Aviara
MGI(SM), a molecular grade index to objectively measure tumor grade. Aviara
H/I and Aviara MGI are available separately, or can be combined in the Aviara
Breast Cancer Index(SM). Additional tests are in development. AviaraDx
offers these diagnostic tests to qualified physicians or laboratories through
its CLIA-certified, CAP accredited laboratory service operations. For more
information, visit http://www.aviaradx.com.
PRESS CONTACT:
Keith McCormick
858/587-5880
kmccormick@aviaradx.com
SOURCE AviaraDx, Inc.
Copyright © 2008, PRNewswire
Copyright © 2008, NewsBlaze,
Daily News
Tags: Healthcare, Pharmaceuticals, , Health, california
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