Alpha Tau Medical Ltd. (“Alpha Tau”, or the “Company”) (NASDAQ: DRTS, DRTSW), the developer of the innovative alpha-radiation cancer therapy Alpha DaRT, announced that its first patient with recurrent lung cancer has been treated, in a clinical trial at Hadassah Medical Center in Jerusalem, Israel.
The trial is designed to treat up to ten patients with recurrent tumors in the mediastinum area of the chest, and allows for the use of concurrent chemotherapy, targeted therapy, or immunotherapy, if indicated. The study will assess the safety and feasibility of delivering Alpha DaRT sources into the lung using an endobronchial ultrasound (EBUS) procedure, including by observing the rate of successful source placement and any treatment-related adverse events. In addition, the study will also assess the efficacy of Alpha DaRT for this indication by examining tumor response at one and three months after source insertion using RECIST criteria, as well as tumor coverage.
According to the WHO’s International Agency for Research on Cancer, lung cancer is the leading cause of cancer-related deaths worldwide, with almost 2.5 million new cases detected each year, and is often only diagnosed at advanced stages, when treatment options are limited.In the U.S.,lung cancer is the third most common cancer, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, with an estimated 210,000 new cases per year.
“Alpha Tau continues to forge ahead with the application of Alpha DaRT to a broader set of indications, particularly in tumors in visceral organs and other complex cases,” said Alpha Tau Chief Executive Officer Uzi Sofer. “As we see continued clinician excitement and demand for use of the Alpha DaRT in an ever-increasing set of cancers, the ability to start treating patients in as terrible and widespread an illness as lung cancer is particularly meaningful.”
“The Institute of Pulmonology of Hadassah Medical Center is excited to utilize this groundbreaking EBUS-guided implantable alpha radiation technology to treat a patient with lung cancer for the first time,” noted Prof. Neville Berkman, MD, the study principal investigator and Director of the Institute of Pulmonology and Head of Adults and Invasive Pulmonology Unit, Hadassah Medical Center, who treated the patient. “The treatment makes use of bronchoscopic endobronchial ultrasound to insert the Alpha DaRT sources. We look forward to further examining the promise of what the Alpha DaRT treatment can offer lung cancer patients and their families.”
“Treating the first lung patient with the Alpha DaRT is a very exciting moment. We have already demonstrated the advantages of the Alpha DaRT technology in a number of other tumor types, but examining its application to an organ such the lung, given its proximity to vital healthy organs, may hopefully open new doors to a global population of patients with otherwise poor treatment options,” commented Alpha Tau Chief Medical Officer Robert Den, MD.
“Treating the first patient with lung cancer using Alpha DaRT marks a significant advancement, introducing a novel approach that combines the precision of alpha-emitting particles with the ability to selectively target and destroy tumor cells while minimizing damage to surrounding healthy tissues,” added Dr. Philip Blumenfeld, study co-investigator and Senior Radiation Oncologist and Head of Thoracic Radiation Oncology Services at Hadassah Medical Center. “In this specific case, the patient had already undergone conventional radiation therapy to the lung and lymph nodes, and additional radiation would have posed a high risk of serious harm to nearby structures, particularly the esophagus and bronchus.”