The prospective, controlled, multi-center study was conducted at five centers in the Netherlands between March 2015 and February 2016.
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[28-November-2017] |
CHICAGO, Nov. 28, 2017 /PRNewswire/ -- Seno Medical Instruments, Inc., the leader in new technology for breast cancer diagnosis using optoacoustic (OA/US) imaging to differentiate benign from malignant masses, today announced clinical data demonstrating that its Imagio™ breast imaging system effectively downgraded the risk classification of benign breast masses and upgraded the risk classification of malignant masses compared with ultrasound (US) alone. The data are being presented today at 3:20 p.m. CDT during an oral presentation by a principal study investigator at the Radiology Society of North America 103rd Annual Meeting, taking place November 26 - December 1 in Chicago. The prospective, controlled, multi-center study was conducted at five centers in the Netherlands between March 2015 and February 2016 and enrolled 217 patients at least 18 years of age with at least one breast mass totaling 223 breast masses classified as BI-RADS (Breast Imaging and Reporting Data System) category 4A or 4B and with a corresponding probability of malignancy (POM) ranging from >2% to 50% based on prior US assessment. The likelihood that a breast mass is malignant increases with increasing BI-RADS category number. All subjects underwent an OA/US evaluation after conventional US and prior to biopsy. The OA/US data were used to estimate the POM on a scale from 0% to 100% and, when appropriate, the BI-RADS classification determined by conventional US was adjusted. Biopsies were performed within 30 days of enrollment and after the OA/US procedure had been performed and interpreted. The OA/US results were compared with biopsy results as the reference standard. Patients were asked to complete a satisfaction survey after undergoing OA/US evaluation "The negative consequences of biopsies of benign breast masses include pain, anxiety, fear, direct expenses and indirect expenses related to work missed and managing complications," said study investigator Gisela L.G. Menezes, M.D., Ph.D. and postdoc at the University Medical Center Utrecht, the Netherlands. "Using OA/US, benign masses originally classified as suspicious may be downgraded to probably benign or benign, potentially decreasing the number of biopsies of benign lesions." Key findings from the study include:
"The results from this study indicate that a substantial percentage of breast masses classified as BI-RADS 4A or greater, based on conventional US, can be downgraded with OA/US. This suggests that the functional and morphologic information gained with OA/US has the potential to benefit women undergoing breast mass evaluation," said Tom Umbel, CEO of Seno Medical Instruments. "Detection of a breast mass can make a woman very anxious, and it is incumbent on everyone involved in assessing breast masses to minimize patients' stress and anxiety while providing the most accurate diagnosis possible. We believe that the Imagio system has an important role to play in improving breast cancer diagnosis and ensuring optimal patient care and outcomes." The Imagio™ breast imaging system was designed and is being studied to identify two functional hallmarks of cancer: the presence of abnormal blood vessels (tumor angiogenesis) and the relative reduction in oxygen content of blood that occurs in cancer compared to benign masses and normal tissues. The technology has its CE mark in Europe and is the subject of a U.S. PMA filing with the FDA. About Seno Medical Instruments, Inc. About Breast Cancer Media Contact 1 Breast Cancer Facts & Figures, American Cancer Society (2017). Accessed on October 24, 2017: https://www.cancer.org/research/cancer-facts-statistics/breast-cancer-facts-figures.html View original content with multimedia:http://www.prnewswire.com/news-releases/seno-medical-instruments-imagio-opto-acoustic-breast-imaging-system-demonstrates-ability-to-downgrade-risk-classification-of-benign-breast-masses-in-a-prospective-european-clinical-trial-300562745.html SOURCE Seno Medical Instruments, Inc. |