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Targeted Therapeutics to Treat Solid Tumors

Cancer is a devastating disease that can have a profound impact on individuals, families, and communities.

Solid tumor cancers, such as pancreatic cancer, recurrent oral cavity cancer and resistant melanoma are among the most aggressive and challenging to treat with few treatment options and poor treatment outcomes. While recent advances in immunotherapy and other technologies have shown improvements, effective treatments for many solid tumors remain elusive.

Focal Medical uses its iontophoretic delivery system to deliver powerful anti-cancer agents, precisely targeting the tumor via non-circulatory pathways and avoiding exposure of healthy organs with its associated toxicity. Our goal is to apply Focal Medical’s technology to improve health outcomes for patients with solid tumor cancers.

IOP Gemcitabine for Pancreatic Cancer

Among cancers, malignant pancreatic tumors are particularly insidious and lethal.

Symptoms are not typically evident until the disease reaches later stages. At diagnosis, the advanced stage of the cancer and the complex interface between the pancreas and adjacent organs often preclude surgical resection. Five-year survival rates are extremely low. Systemic chemotherapy is often the only treatment option and yields limited increase in life expectancy.

Pancreatic cancer cells are susceptible to anti-cancer agents; the consistent limitation is achieving therapeutic levels of drug in the target organ without causing a deterioration of the patient’s overall health due to systemic toxicity. 

In our lead program, we are targeting locally advanced nonresectable pancreatic cancer and are shifting the paradigm in how therapy is delivered. We empower gemcitabine (an FDA approved chemotherapeutic) to deliver its anti-cancer effect directly to the tumor precisely and specifically with the goal to reduce tumor burden and restage nonresectable tumors to resectable.

While this is our lead program, we expect to utilize our technology more broadly and open a new treatment approach for a range of challenging to treat solid tumors.

Pancreatic Cancer Facts

62,000 people a year are diagnosed with pancreatic cancer in the U.S. The five-year survival rate is 13%.

1. Surgery can help, but has limits

Surgical resection is the only potentially curative treatment. However, only ~15% of all patients are eligible for surgery because the extent of tumor growth and its invasion of other important local organs often precludes effective resection.

2. Drug transport to the tumor faces barriers

Pancreatic tumors have poor blood supply, the typical method for transporting drugs. They are also heterogeneous in nature and encased in fibrotic stromal tissue. These obstructions often lead to poor response to drug therapy.

3. Side effects may be significant

Delivery of anti-cancer agents is typically by systemic intravenous infusion following a prescribed course over months. The systemic exposure to chemotherapy agents has significant side effects and may impact quality of life and the ability to tolerate therapy.

Focal Medical’s approach may be a better way

If the targeted delivery of gemcitabine to locally advanced tumors could shrink otherwise unresectable pancreatic tumors away from adjacent blood vessels and other organs, a patient might undergo resection, the only potentially curative treatment for pancreatic cancer.

Studies Show Targeted Therapeutics Can Shrink Pancreatic Tumors

Our plans to revolutionize pancreatic cancer treatment are built on groundbreaking work from cancer laboratories at UNC-Chapel Hill.

We developed an implantable iontophoretic device and used it to deliver gemcitabine precisely and selectively to patient-derived xenograft tumors in mice. These murine models have comparable heterogeneity and stromal resistance of pancreatic tumors in humans. Results showed:

  • 100% of mice saw an average of 40% decrease in tumor volume following treatment with gemcitabine delivered with our iontophoresis delivery system.  
  • In contrast, in the same study, tumors treated with intravenous gemcitabine grew an average of 140%.
  • 5x higher concentration of gemcitabine in tumors treated using our iontophoresis delivery system as compared to intravenous infusion while eliminating virtually all systemic exposure.
Pre-clinical Studies Show Iontophoresis Can Shrink Pancreatic Tumors

Our plans to revolutionize pancreatic cancer treatment are built on groundbreaking work from cancer laboratories at UNC-Chapel Hill.

The labs developed an implantable iontophoretic device, then tested it on patient-derived xenograft models in mice — models that reflect the same heterogeneity and stromal resistance of pancreatic tumors in humans. Results showed:

  • 100% of mice saw an average of 40% decrease in tumor volume following treatment with gemcitabine delivered with our local iontophoresis delivery platform.  In contrast, in the same study, tumors treated with intravenous gemcitabine grew an average of 140%.
  • 5x higher concentration of gemcitabine in tumors as compared to intravenous infusion while eliminating virtually all systemic exposure.
IOP Platinum Drug Delivery for Oral Cavity Cancer

Head and neck cancers (cancers of the oral cavity, pharynx and surrounding tissue) represent a life-threatening disease with a poor prognosis. More than 54,000 new cases occur each year in the United States with a five-year survival rate of 68%. Typically head and neck cancer is considered a local disease and treatments include radiation, chemo-radiation and surgery. 

Surgery is an effective alternative for treating this disease but comes at a high cost when the involved tissue includes the delicate structures in the oral cavity such as the tongue, mandible and pharynx. Surgical removal of these structures can leave the patient permanently disfigured or unable to speak or eat properly.

More effective treatments are needed that can shrink tumors prior to surgery or completely eradicate tumors without the need for surgery. Focal Medical has initiated a research program utilizing its energy-based drug delivery system in head and neck cancer. We are evaluating the treatment of oral cavity tumors in canine companion animals as a model of the human condition. This is being explored in partnership with Virginia-Maryland College of Veterinary Medicine at Virginia Tech.

Local Delivery of Carboplatin for Head and Neck Cancer

Head and neck cancers (cancers of the oral cavity, pharynx and surrounding tissue) represent another life-threatening disease with poor prognosis for patients. More than 54,000 new cases occur each year in the United States. with a five-year survival rate of 68%. Typically head and neck cancer is considered a local disease and treatments include radiation, chemo-radiation and surgery. Surgery is an effective alternative for treating this disease but comes at a high cost when the involved tissue includes the delicate structures in the oral cavity such as the tongue, mandible and pharynx. Surgical removal of these structures can leave the patient permanently disfigured or unable to speak or eat properly.

More effective treatments are needed that can shrink tumors prior to surgery or completely eradicate tumors without the need for surgery. Focal Medical has initiated a research program utilizing its energy-based drug delivery system in head and neck cancer. One approach is the delivery of the chemotherapeutic carboplatin directly to the tumor. Another approach is to use carboplatin as a radiosensitizer in conjunction with local radiation to target tumors. Both of these approaches hold early promise and are being explored in partnership with Virginia Tech.

Resistant Skin Melanoma

Melanoma is a serious type of skin cancer, with 100,640 new cases in the US every year.

10% of melanoma cases come back after treatment, and only 30% of those patients survive 5 years.

Surgery is used for tumors that can be removed, and chemo for those that can’t.

It’s hard to get chemo to the right spot without harming the patient, and even when it works, the cancer can come back in as little as 8 weeks.

We need better treatments for melanoma that don’t lead to drug resistance.

Focal Medical is working on a new way to deliver drugs directly to the tumor, and it’s shown promise in dogs with melanoma.

Resistant Skin Melanoma

Melanoma is a serious type of skin cancer, with 100,640 new cases in the US every year.

10% of melanoma cases come back after treatment, and only 30% of those patients survive 5 years.

Surgery is used for tumors that can be removed, and chemo for those that can’t.

It’s hard to get chemo to the right spot without harming the patient, and even when it works, the cancer can come back in in as little as 8 weeks.

We need better treatments for melanoma that don’t lead to drug resistance.

Focal Medical is working on a new way to deliver drugs directly to the tumor, and it’s shown promise in dogs with melanoma.

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