May 16 2012
Avita
Medical Ltd. (ASX: AVH),
(OTC:
AVMXF), (OTCQX:
AVMXY),the regenerative medicine company, today
announced that it has commenced enrolment in the US FDA-approved
feasibility study for the use of ReCell® Spray-On-Skin™ in the
treatment of hypertrophic dyspigmented scars (raised and/or discoloured
scars).
The initial three patients were treated by Dr Rajiv Sood, at the Richard
M. Fairbanks Burn Center of Wishard Hospital, Indiana University,
Indianapolis, Indiana, for scarring resulting from previous grafting due
to burn injuries.
The approved FDA protocol permits the Company to treat 20 patients with
scars at up to four U.S. study sites; patients will be assessed for
healing and pain on a weekly basis during the initial four weeks
post-treatment; at weeks 12 and 24 the treatment site will be assessed
for healing and aesthetic outcomes by both the patient and an
independent observer.
"Commencement of the FDA scar study is an important milestone for
Avita," said Dr William Dolphin, Avita Medical's CEO. "ReCell has shown
the potential to provide significant benefits over current options in
the treatment of acute and chronic wounds and for a wide range of skin
defects. We are confident that this study will demonstrate the
effectiveness of ReCell in the corrective treatment of scars, making
ReCell directly applicable and immediately relevant to the very large
aesthetic markets."
The feasibility study is primarily designed to confirm the effectiveness
of ReCell for the treatment of scars in a single session in comparison
to the current standard of care involving dermabrasion of the scar and
often requiring multiple treatment sessions; study endpoints are
time-to-healing and aesthetic outcomes. Following completion of the
study, Avita will submit the feasibility data and seek FDA approval for
a statistically powered, pivotal clinical trial.
The study is funded by the US Department of Defense in partnership with
the OSD Manufacturing Technology Program and Rapid Fielding Directorate
for the "Limb Salvage and Regenerative Medicine Initiative." The
contract is a Technology Investment Agreement that is focused on the
transition of the capability to meet DoD needs. ReCell was selected as
it has the potential to be a quantum advance over the existing ability
to treat and re-grow tissue and to substantially reduce the effects and
appearance of scarring and thereby profoundly assist in the treatment
and rehabilitation of wounded warriors suffering from disfigurement and
impeded function due to combat injuries.