At a glance
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A Phase 2, Open-Label Study to Evaluate the Performance and Safety of ONM100, an Intraoperative Fluor Imaging Agent for the Detection of Peritoneal Mets
In Brief
A Phase 2 clinical trial evaluating pegsitacianine for Peritoneal Carcinomatosis. Completed, enrolled 51 participants across 5 sites.
Detailed Summary
Peritoneal carcinomatosis (PC) results from the metastasis of a primary cancer of the peritoneum (e.g., appendiceal, ovarian, uterine, colorectal, and gastric cancers) that then disseminates throughout the abdominal cavity. Historically progression to PC was considered terminal and resulted in survival times on the scale of a few months with palliative care being the best option for patients. More recently, cytoreductive surgery (CS) has emerged as a means to prolong and improve patient lives with a median increase in survival of up to \~5 years. It has been reported that for every 10% increase in cytoreduction there is a 5.5% increase in median survival time. In addition to surgical tumor debulking within the peritoneal space, it has also been shown that coupling surgical intervention with hyperthermic intraperitoneal chemotherapy (HIPEC) can have an even greater impact on patient outcomes. Pegsitacianine, a micellar fluorescence agent, exploits the ubiquitous pH differences observed between cancerous and normal tissues. This in turn, provides a highly sensitive and specific fluorescence response after localizing within the tumor microenvironment, thus allowing the detection of primary tumors, their margins, metastatic disease, and tumor-containing lymph nodes.
Study Details
Timeline
Interventions
An intraoperative nanoparticle-based fluorescence imaging agent comprised of micelles covalently conjugated to indocyanine green (ICG).