SANTA CLARA, Calif., Aug. 9, 2024. Invenio Imaging, a leader in intraoperative fresh tissue imaging and artificial intelligence (AI), announced today the enrollment of the first patients in a US pivotal study of its AI-based image analysis module for lung cancer. The ON-SITE study, a multicenter study in bronchoscopy combining Stimulated Raman Histology with Artificial Intelligence for rapid lung cancer detection, is in collaboration with Johnson & Johnson Enterprise Innovation Inc. and will be conducted at multiple centers including The University of Texas MD Anderson Cancer Center, Corewell Health, Memorial Sloan Kettering Cancer Center, and University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill.
Lung cancer is the leading cause of cancer-related deaths in the United States. This has led to the institution of large-scale screening programs for high-risk patients, which results in an estimated 3.1 million new primary lung nodules identified each year. Despite major sector investment in minimally-invasive biopsy technology, obtaining adequate tissue for biomarker and treatment determination remains a challenge. For this reason, bronchoscopy guidelines recommend rapid-on-site tissue evaluation (ROSE) for lung biopsies.
“ROSE requires that a cytologist or highly trained cytotechnician be physically present in the procedure room, and thus it is not available at many centers performing lung biopsy due to resource limitations,” said Jason Akulian, MD, Director of Interventional Pulmonlogy at UNC, “we are excited by the NIO’s potential to extend the benefits of ROSE to the proceduralist when the service is not available.”
The NIO Laser Imaging System allows rapid imaging of fresh tissue biopsies in the treatment room. Sample preparation does not require staining or sectioning and can be performed by the existing OR-staff. NIO Slides are also designed to allow retrieval of the sample for downstream analysis. NIO images are natively digital and can be shared in near real-time. The ON-SITE study aims to develop and validate an AI-based image analysis module for the NIO Laser Imaging System that is intended to assist physicians in the detection of cancer in bronchoscopic lung biopsies in situations where ROSE is not available for the sample type.
“Artificial intelligence aiding healthcare may seem utopic, but the future is coming. While still investigational, the promise of fast, in-room, accurate identification of tissue that is suspicious for cancer has the potential to ultimately lead to improved outcomes, a beneficial cost/benefit profile, and personalized treatments,” said Gustavo Cumbo-Nacheli, MD, pulmonologist at Corewell Health and one of the site PIs for the ON-SITE study.
“Enrolling the first patient in the ON-SITE study is an important milestone for Invenio, as we aim to develop the first FDA-cleared AI to identify cell/tissue morphology suspicious for cancer in lung biopsies,” said Jay Trautman, PhD, co-founder and CEO of Invenio Imaging. “Near real-time image analysis on the NIO Laser Imaging System completes the end-to-end solution for streamlined intraoperative histology.”
About Invenio Imaging Inc.
Invenio Imaging is an emerging, privately held medical device company based in Santa Clara (CA) dedicated to advancing the care of cancer patients by combining intraoperative fresh tissue imaging and artificial intelligence. The NIO Laser Imaging System is FDA-registered and CE-marked and has been used in over 10,000 procedures across neurosurgery, bronchoscopy, urology, and endoscopy. Invenio Imaging’s first AI product, the NIO Glioma Reveal, has received CE mark and is available for clinical use in Europe. The AI product for lung cancer that is the subject of the ON-SITE study has not been approved for clinical use. Invenio received a Medical Design Excellence Award and was selected for the Rosenman Innovator and MedTech Innovator cohorts.
Disclaimer
Research reported in this press release is supported by the National Cancer Institute of the National Institutes of Health under Award Number 1R44CA281581-01. The content is solely the responsibility of the authors and does not necessarily represent the official views of the National Institutes of Health.
Posted: August 2024
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