Adding Multi-Cancer Early Detection (MCED)
Screening to Standard of Care Screening More Than Doubled the
Number of Cancers Detected
71% of Participants With MCED-Detected
Cancers Had Cancer Types With No Routine Screening Tests
Available
Approximately Half of the MCED-Detected New
Cancers Were Stage I or II
MCED-Predicted Cancer Signal Origin Had
97.1% Accuracy and Enabled Targeted Diagnostic Evaluations
MCED Screening was Implemented in Adults
With Elevated Cancer Risk Without Study-Related Serious Adverse
Events
Participants Reported High Satisfaction and
Low Negative Psychological Impact With MCED Screening
GRAIL, LLC, a healthcare company whose mission is to detect
cancer early when it can be cured, today announced final results
from the interventional PATHFINDER study, which evaluated
multi-cancer early detection (MCED) screening using a blood test
and the clinical care pathways following a “cancer signal detected”
MCED test result in 6,662 individuals aged 50 years or older, an
age group at elevated risk for cancer. Results were presented in a
proffered paper session at the European Society for Medical
Oncology (ESMO) Congress 2022 in Paris.
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“The PATHFINDER study is an exciting first step towards
fundamental change in the approach to cancer screening. The study
found cancer in about 1% of participants including types for which
there is no established screening method. The study demonstrated
the feasibility of this paradigm and solid test performance,” said
Deb Schrag, MD, MPH, chair, Department of Medicine at Memorial
Sloan Kettering Cancer Center in New York. “Although continued
public health efforts to optimize adherence to existing screening
strategies that have been proven effective are critical, this study
provides a glimpse of what the future may hold—the opportunity for
screening using blood tests to detect various types of cancers at
their earliest and most treatable stages.”
PATHFINDER was a single-arm study that measured the time
required to achieve diagnostic resolution (i.e., healthcare
provider-defined end to the diagnostic evaluation) following a
“cancer signal detected” MCED blood test result and the number and
types of diagnostic tests that were used (primary endpoint). MCED
test performance was a key secondary endpoint, including positive
predictive value (PPV, the percent of cancer signal detected
results that were confirmed to be cancer) and the accuracy of the
predicted cancer signal origin (CSO). Participants were followed
for 12 months after enrollment. If a participant had a negative
MCED test at enrollment but developed a cancer within the 12-month
follow-up, it was counted as an MCED false negative.
Test performance was measured using both an earlier version of
Galleri (MCED-E) and a refined version of Galleri (MCED-Scr). The
earlier version of the test was refined to reduce the detection of
pre-malignant hematologic conditions, which are fairly common, and
improve prediction of the cancer signal origin. The study was
completed with the earlier version of the test (MCED-E) and then
the blood samples were retested in a pre-specified retrospective
analysis using the refined Galleri test (MCED-Scr).
“When added to standard of care screening, MCED testing more
than doubled the number of cancers detected compared to standard
screening alone. In fact, Galleri detected more cancers than all
U.S. Preventive Services Task Force-recommended standard single
cancer screenings combined. These included Stage I cancers of the
liver, small intestine, and uterus, and Stage II pancreatic, bone,
and oropharyngeal cancers,” said Jeffrey Venstrom, MD, chief
medical officer at GRAIL. “This is particularly notable given the
PATHFINDER population was heavily screened with higher-than-average
rates for mammography, colonoscopy, and low-dose CT lung
scans.”
A cancer signal was detected in 92 participants, two of whom
began workup prior to the return of their MCED test results. Of
these, 35 participants were diagnosed with 36 cancers. Among the
confirmed cancers, 71% (25/35) of participants had cancer types
that have no routine cancer screening available. Nearly half (48%)
of the non-recurrent cancers were found in early-stages (Stage I or
II). Standard of care screening identified 29 cancers, and another
56 cancers were diagnosed because symptoms appeared or tumors were
found incidentally or from monitoring for cancer recurrence.
"Being a part of a Galleri study has had a tremendous impact on
my life. I was diagnosed with head and neck cancer. It’s small and
very treatable," said Richard Warg, a PATHFINDER 2 study
participant who was diagnosed with Stage I head and neck cancer
after taking the Galleri MCED test at Sutter Health. "My friend's
dad had the same cancer, and it went undiagnosed for two years. It
had plenty of time to metastasize and ended up in his lungs. I
didn’t have any symptoms, so I was so happy the Galleri test found
my cancer before it was too late."
The cancer signal origin prediction had a 97% accuracy and
directed physician clinical workup, leading to resolution of the
cancer diagnosis in less than three months for most participants
with a true positive signal (73%), and in less than two months for
half of them. The median time to diagnostic resolution was longer
for false positive results (162 days); 44% of these participants
had scheduled follow-up imaging or procedures three or more months
later, contributing to the longer time to resolution.
Most participants underwent imaging procedures, such as scans or
MRIs, following true and false-positive results. As expected, most
true positive participants (82%) underwent an invasive procedure to
confirm a cancer diagnosis. Three underwent endoscopies triggered
by the predicted cancer signal origin, and 24 had procedures
triggered only by abnormal imaging, physical, or laboratory
findings, including three surgical biopsies. A smaller proportion
of false positive participants had invasive procedures (30%). Five
had procedures triggered by CSO predictions (five endoscopies, one
endometrial biopsy and one pap smear), and 12 had procedures
triggered only by abnormal imaging, physical, or laboratory
findings, or by their medical history. No study-related serious
adverse events were reported as a result of MCED testing in the
study, and there were no adverse events reported from diagnostic
workups.
The PPV was 43.1% with the refined test and 38.0% with the
earlier version. Specificity, or the percentage of true negatives,
of the refined test was 99.5%, and 99.1% with the earlier version,
and the false positive rate for both versions was less than 1%.
Test performance was consistent with the interim analysis and the
previous case-controlled Circulating Cell-free Genome Atlas (CCGA)
study.
“The refinements we made to the earlier version of Galleri
resulted in clinically expected outcomes and had the intended
result of reducing false positives from hematological signals,”
added Venstrom. “While PATHFINDER was not designed to determine
sensitivity or the number of cancer types detected by Galleri, 11
different cancer types were detected in this study that have no
standard screening today, and the false positive rate was less than
1%. In the much larger CCGA case-control study, the Galleri test
detected over 50 types of cancer.”
An analysis of participant-reported outcomes of anxiety,
distress, and satisfaction related to MCED testing from the study
were also presented at the ESMO Congress 2022. PATHFINDER
participants completed patient-reported outcomes assessments before
MCED testing, after receiving MCED test results, and at the end of
the study. The analysis found 97.1% of participants reported a high
level of satisfaction with the test, including those who had both
true positive (92%) and false-positive (82.3%) results. As
expected, a higher level of anxiety was seen in participants
following a positive result, but that resolved to pre-MCED test
levels within 12 months.
Preliminary Real World Analysis Generally Consistent with
PATHFINDER Results
GRAIL conducted an analysis of the first 38,154 Galleri
commercial test results to monitor Galleri performance in a real
world setting. The analysis showed a 1.1% cancer signal detection
rate. As seen in clinical trials, the signal detection rate
increases with age and male sex, consistent with the National
Cancer Institute’s Surveillance, Epidemiology, and End Results
Program (SEER) statistics. Among 326 patients with a positive
cancer signal detected result and short-term follow up (as
voluntarily reported by the ordering physicians), 108 cancers have
been confirmed by the ordering providers to-date, representing 28
different cancer types. Of the 108 patients with a
provider-confirmed cancer diagnosis, 64 had no recommended cancer
screening test (59%). Provider-confirmed cancers include, among
others, Stage I pancreatic, head and neck, endometrial, esophageal,
and gastrointestinal stromal tumor (GIST) cancers and Stage II
rectal, liver, and head and neck cancers.
“Every year, we lose more than 600,000 loved ones to
cancer in the U.S. alone. Unfortunately, the burden of cancer will
grow with the demographic tidal wave, as the absolute risk of
developing any cancer increases as we get older,” said Josh Ofman,
MD, MSHS, president at GRAIL. “Bending the cancer mortality curve
will require earlier detection of more cancer. However, a world
with more single cancer screening tests is simply clinically and
economically untenable as each single cancer screening test has a
false positive rate of 5-10%. We need to expand from screening for
individual cancers to also screening individuals for cancer. We
believe MCED tests can enable this paradigm shift by finding more
types of cancer at earlier stages with a single blood test.”
About GRAIL’s MCED Clinical Development Program
The Galleri clinical development program consists of studies
that collectively include more than 335,000 participants—and what
is believed to be the largest linked datasets of genomic and
clinical data in the cancer field. GRAIL’s program includes the
foundational CCGA development and validation study, the
interventional PATHFINDER and PATHFINDER 2 studies, the NHS-Galleri
randomized, controlled clinical study, the STRIVE and SUMMIT
observational studies, and the REFLECTION real-world registry. The
largest of these, the NHS-Galleri trial, has enrolled 140,000
participants with the primary objective of a reduction in
late-stage cancer diagnoses, thought to be a necessary prerequisite
for a mortality reduction.
About GRAIL
GRAIL is a healthcare company whose mission is to detect cancer
early, when it can be cured. GRAIL is focused on alleviating the
global burden of cancer by developing pioneering technology to
detect and identify multiple deadly cancer types early. The company
is using the power of next-generation sequencing, population-scale
clinical studies, and state-of-the-art computer science and data
science to enhance the scientific understanding of cancer biology,
and to develop its multi-cancer early detection blood test. GRAIL
is headquartered in Menlo Park, CA with locations in Washington,
D.C., North Carolina, and the United Kingdom. GRAIL, LLC, is a
subsidiary of Illumina, Inc. (NASDAQ:ILMN) currently held separate
from Illumina Inc. under the terms of the Interim Measures Order of
the European Commission dated 29 October 2021.
For more information, visit grail.com.
About Galleri®
The earlier that cancer is detected, the higher the chance of
successful outcomes. The Galleri multi-cancer early detection test
can detect signals across more than 50 types of cancer, as defined
by the American Joint Committee on Cancer Staging Manual, through a
routine blood draw. When a cancer signal is detected, the Galleri
test predicts the cancer signal origin, or where the cancer is
located in the body, with high accuracy to help guide the next
steps to diagnosis. The Galleri test is available in the U.S. and
requires a prescription from a licensed healthcare provider. The
Galleri test should be used in addition to recommended cancer
screenings such as mammography, colonoscopy, prostate-specific
antigen (PSA) test, or cervical cancer screening. It is intended
for use in people with an elevated risk of cancer, such as those
aged 50 or older.
All cells—cancer and healthy ones—shed DNA, which is called
cell-free DNA, into the bloodstream. One of the "hallmarks of
cancer" is when methyl groups are added to DNA. This does not alter
the DNA code but it can alter gene expression. Methylation patterns
on tumor-derived cell-free DNA carry cancer-specific signals and
are therefore very helpful in detecting cancer and determining its
origin. Galleri uses next-generation sequencing and machine
learning algorithms to analyze these methylation patterns of
cell-free DNA in the bloodstream.
For more information about Galleri, visit galleri.com.
Important Galleri Safety Information
The Galleri test is recommended for use in adults with an
elevated risk for cancer, such as those aged 50 or older. The
Galleri test does not detect all cancers and should be used in
addition to routine cancer screening tests recommended by a
healthcare provider. Galleri is intended to detect cancer signals
and predict where in the body the cancer signal is located. Use of
Galleri is not recommended in individuals who are pregnant, 21
years old or younger, or undergoing active cancer treatment.
Results should be interpreted by a healthcare provider in the
context of medical history, clinical signs and symptoms. A test
result of “No Cancer Signal Detected” does not rule out cancer. A
test result of “Cancer Signal Detected” requires confirmatory
diagnostic evaluation by medically established procedures (e.g.,
imaging) to confirm cancer.
If cancer is not confirmed with further testing, it could mean
that cancer is not present or testing was insufficient to detect
cancer, including due to the cancer being located in a different
part of the body. False-positive (a cancer signal detected when
cancer is not present) and false-negative (a cancer signal not
detected when cancer is present) test results do occur. Rx
only.
Laboratory/Test Information
GRAIL’s clinical laboratory is certified under the Clinical
Laboratory Improvement Amendments of 1988 (CLIA) and accredited by
the College of American Pathologists. The Galleri test was
developed, and its performance characteristics were determined by
GRAIL. The Galleri test has not been cleared or approved by the
U.S. Food and Drug Administration. GRAIL’s clinical laboratory is
regulated under CLIA to perform high-complexity testing. The
Galleri test is intended for clinical purposes.
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version on businesswire.com: https://www.businesswire.com/news/home/20220911005035/en/
For GRAIL Media: Trish Rowland Cammy Duong
pr@grail.com
Investor Relations: Alex Dobbin ir@grail.com