Oncimmune Holdings plc (LON:ONC) a leading early cancer detection company developing and commercialising its proprietary EarlyCDT® platform technology, announced today that is has signed research agreements with Egybiotech, a private research company with a broad research portfolio in the areas of cancer research, and Aarhus University Hospital (“Aarhus”), Denmark.
Under these agreements, Egybiotech and Aarhus provide Oncimmune with prospectively collected blood samples and associated clinical data on each patient in order to further clinically validate the Company’s EarlyCDT® platform technology in liver and ovarian cancer, respectively. Oncimmune will use the samples to validate panels of autoantibodies as diagnostic tests capable of distinguishing between malignant and non-malignant liver and ovarian diseases, particularly at an early stage.
Geoffrey Hamilton-Fairley, CEO of Oncimmune Holdings Plc commented: “Current biomarkers for liver and ovarian cancer perform poorly and our EarlyCDT® technology has the potential to allow earlier diagnosis of these serious diseases and improve patient outcomes. The agreements are a significant further step in the final clinical validation of EarlyCDT® liver and ovarian and will enable us to remain on track towards the goal of launching the tests commercially in 2017. “
About Oncimmune
Oncimmune is a leading early cancer detection company developing and commercialising its proprietary EarlyCDT® platform technology. Oncimmune has pioneered the development of autoantibody tests that can detect cancer up to four years earlier than other methods and can be applied to a very wide range of solid tumour types. The Company’s first product, EarlyCDT®-Lung, was launched in 2012, as a CLIA test in the USA and since then over 140,000 commercial tests have been sold. EarlyCDT®-Lung is available through physicians in the US and also privately in the UK and other regions. EarlyCDT®-Lung is being used in the largest ever randomised trial for the early detection of lung cancer using biomarkers, the National Health Service (NHS) Scotland ECLS study of 12,000 high-risk smokers. EarlyCDT® tests for liver and ovarian cancer are in development.