Novocure™, a commercial stage private oncology company, has announced that prominent neuro-oncologists at four clinical centers in the U.S. will be the first to provide access to its Tumor Treating Fields (TTFields)™ device, NovoTTF-100A System™, for the treatment of recurrent glioblastoma multiforme (GBM). GBM is a deadly brain tumor affecting approximately 10,000 Americans each year.
The NovoTTF™ device, approved by the Food and Drug Administration in April 2011, will be available for prescription use in the U.S. initially through several noted brain cancer research centers whose staff have completed training in the use of this unique device. The neuro-oncologists and their centers are:
- Dr. Eric T. Wong, Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center in Boston, Massachusetts
- Dr. Jay-Jiguang Zhu, Mischer Neuroscience Institute in the Memorial Hermann Hospital and The University of Texas Health Science Center, Houston, Texas
- Dr. Joseph Landolfi, New Jersey Neuroscience Institute at JFK, Edison, New Jersey
- Dr. Herbert Engelhard, University of Illinois Hospital in Chicago, Illinois
- Novocure expects to train the following clinicians and their staff at the following clinical sites by year end:
- Dr. Andrew Lassman, Columbia University Medical Center at New York – Presbyterian Hospital, New York, New York
- Dr. Lisa DeAngelis, Memorial Sloan Kettering Cancer Center, New York, New York
- Dr. Santosh Kesari, University of California San Diego Moores Cancer Center, San Diego, California
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"We are pleased to be working closely with these prestigious clinicians and their clinical staff to provide GBM patients with an effective treatment option, and one which does not have the usual debilitating side effects of traditional chemotherapy," said Gabriel Leung, Novocure's Chairman of Global Commercialization. "The clinical staff at these centers have mastered the training and received the certification needed to provide the Novocure TTF therapy to patients. We recognize and appreciate the time and effort dedicated by these individuals to ensure their patients have access to this new treatment."
GBM is the most aggressive and most common form of primary brain tumor in the U.S. The disease affects approximately 10,000 Americans each year. The median overall survival time from initial diagnosis is 15 months with optimal treatment, and median survival from the time of tumor recurrence is only 3-5 months without additional effective treatment. The disease is widely recognized as one of the most aggressive and deadly forms of cancer.
TTF therapy, a novel platform technology for the treatment of solid tumors, provides physicians with a fourth treatment modality for cancer in addition to surgery, radiation therapy and chemotherapy.
TTF therapy has been shown in vitro and in vivo to effectively inhibit tumor growth by inducing cell death. TTF takes advantage of the electrical characteristics, geometrical shape and replication rate of dividing cancer cells – all of which makes them susceptible to the effects of alternating electric fields. TTF therapy is delivered using non-invasive, insulated transducer arrays that are placed directly on the skin in the region of the tumor. TTF therapy does not deliver any electric current to the tissue; it does not stimulate nerves or muscles or heat the tissue. It creates an artificial, alternating electric field within the tumor which disrupts cancer cell division and can cause complete destruction of the dividing cancer cells.