Summary
Each year, two out of three cancer patients undergo radiation therapy, meaning close to 1.5M patients in Europe and 2M in the US. However, scientific evidences prove a direct link between radiation therapy and several serious late effects. This because patient’s tolerance to radiation vary significantly and radiotherapy affects indiscriminately both healthy and cancer cells, damaging also active working cells, tissues or organs around the tumour. There is, therefore, an unmet clinical need to tailor treatments to each patient’s unique biology. NovaTests are the first predictive radio-sensitivity tests for cancer treatment. By analysing a simple blood sample, in one week time, we can determine with high accuracy (over 90%) not only whether a patient is sensitive or not to radiation but also how sensitive the patient is. We allow for more efficient treatments and improved quality of cancer survivors, not only during radiation treatments but for the rest of their lives. Our first test, the NovaGray Breast® is aimed at measuring radiosensitivity for breast cancer patients. It meets all regulatory requirements of the 98/79 directive pertaining to the in-vitro diagnostic medical devices, has been stamped with the CE marking in February 2016. So far, €0.5M million have been invested into the development and testing of technology to ensure its robustness and efficiency and move into the next stage of tests development and validation. Within the overall project, we intend to scale-up the process by automating it and run a multi-centre clinical trial to validate the reliability of the test. Further ongoing developments include the extension of the technology to prostate and lung cancers. The proposed work in Phase 1 of the SME instrument fits into our overall plan to reach the market by contributing the financial resources needed to plan a fast sound wider deployment of NovaTests and their market uptake.
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More information & hyperlinks
Web resources: | https://cordis.europa.eu/project/id/817116 |
Start date: | 01-05-2018 |
End date: | 30-09-2018 |
Total budget - Public funding: | 71 429,00 Euro - 50 000,00 Euro |
Cordis data
Original description
Each year, two out of three cancer patients undergo radiation therapy, meaning close to 1.5M patients in Europe and 2M in the US. However, scientific evidences prove a direct link between radiation therapy and several serious late effects. This because patient’s tolerance to radiation vary significantly and radiotherapy affects indiscriminately both healthy and cancer cells, damaging also active working cells, tissues or organs around the tumour. There is, therefore, an unmet clinical need to tailor treatments to each patient’s unique biology. NovaTests are the first predictive radio-sensitivity tests for cancer treatment. By analysing a simple blood sample, in one week time, we can determine with high accuracy (over 90%) not only whether a patient is sensitive or not to radiation but also how sensitive the patient is. We allow for more efficient treatments and improved quality of cancer survivors, not only during radiation treatments but for the rest of their lives. Our first test, the NovaGray Breast® is aimed at measuring radiosensitivity for breast cancer patients. It meets all regulatory requirements of the 98/79 directive pertaining to the in-vitro diagnostic medical devices, has been stamped with the CE marking in February 2016. So far, €0.5M million have been invested into the development and testing of technology to ensure its robustness and efficiency and move into the next stage of tests development and validation. Within the overall project, we intend to scale-up the process by automating it and run a multi-centre clinical trial to validate the reliability of the test. Further ongoing developments include the extension of the technology to prostate and lung cancers. The proposed work in Phase 1 of the SME instrument fits into our overall plan to reach the market by contributing the financial resources needed to plan a fast sound wider deployment of NovaTests and their market uptake.Status
CLOSEDCall topic
EIC-SMEInst-2018-2020Update Date
27-10-2022
Geographical location(s)
Structured mapping
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