Exact Sciences Unveils Data Showing Promise of Multi-Cancer Early Detection at AACR Special Conference on Liquid Biopsy
New evidence shows multi-biomarker class approach improved cancer detection, including in earlier stages when treatment may be more effective
Modeling data estimate adding MCED testing to standard-of-care screening could reduce cancer mortality by 17%
New analysis from DETECT-A study supports MCED testing as a complement to current guideline-recommended screening
“Cancer is on pace to be the leading cause of death in the
A new study demonstrates the ability of a multi-biomarker class MCED test to improve early-stage sensitivity by incorporating a DNA mutation reflex approach to methylation and protein (MP) test results. When excluding breast and prostate cancer and at a 98.5% specificity, sensitivity increased by 28% for stage I cancers and 12.5% for early-stage cancers (stages I and II) in a case-control study, underscoring the potential of a three-biomarker class (DNA methylation, protein, DNA mutation reflex, or MP-r) test to improve the detection of cancer in earlier stages.
Cancer stage |
MP-r sensitivity |
MP sensitivity |
% improvement |
Stage I |
22.1% |
17.2% |
28.0% |
Stage II |
54.7% |
51.9% |
5.5% |
Stage I/II |
35.9% |
31.9% |
12.5% |
Overall |
62.3% |
59.3% |
5.0% |
This new research will help inform the final design of Exact Sciences’ Cancerguard™ test, which is currently in development and intends to harness the additive sensitivity of multiple biomarker classes to detect more cancers in earlier stages.
The abstracts featured at the
Title: Performance of multi-biomarker class reflex testing in a prospectively-collected cohort
Poster session:
Poster number: A056
Key findings: A new analysis from a case-control study demonstrated the ability of a three-biomarker class (DNA methylation, protein, DNA mutation reflex, or MP-r) MCED test approach to increase sensitivity for early-stage detection. When excluding breast and prostate cancer, stage I sensitivity increased by 28%, and stage I/II increased by 12.5%.
Title: The potential of multi-cancer early detection screening for reducing cancer mortality
Oral presentation:
Presenter: Tyson, C
Poster number: PR006, A073
Key findings: New modeling points to the potential to reduce the burden of cancer by demonstrating an estimated 42% reduction in stage IV cancer incidence and a 17% estimated 10-year reduction in cancer mortality with the addition of MCED testing to usual care.
Title: Lung cancer screening adherence among participants in DETECT-A, the first prospective interventional trial of a multi-cancer early detection (MCED) blood test
Poster session:
Poster number: A064
Key findings: Analysis from the prospective, interventional DETECT-A study showed lung cancer screening adherence was not reduced in participants who received an MCED test compared to controls.
About the DETECT-A study
The DETECT-A (Detecting cancers Early Through Elective mutation-based blood Collection and Testing) study was the first-ever large, prospective, interventional study to use a blood test to detect multiple types of cancer in a real-world setting. The DETECT-A study enrolled more than 10,000 women with no history of cancer to determine if a blood test in combination with standard-of-care screenings could detect cancers before signs and symptoms appeared. The CancerSEEK test, the MCED test studied in DETECT-A, was the forerunner to the Cancerguard test, the MCED test currently in development at
About the Cancerguard™ test
The Cancerguard test, currently in development, is designed to detect multiple cancers in their earliest stages from a single blood draw. Building upon decades of research,
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Forward-Looking Statement
This news release contains forward-looking statements concerning our expectations, anticipations, intentions, beliefs, or strategies regarding the future. These forward-looking statements are based on assumptions that we have made as of the date hereof and are subject to known and unknown risks and uncertainties that could cause actual results, conditions, and events to differ materially from those anticipated. Therefore, you should not place undue reliance on forward-looking statements. Examples of forward-looking statements include, among others, statements we make regarding the development and commercialization of the Cancerguard test, and the performance characteristics and healthcare benefits of the Cancerguard test. Risks and uncertainties that may affect our forward-looking statements are described in the Risk Factors sections of our most recent Annual Report on Form 10-K and any subsequent Quarterly Reports on Form 10-Q, and in our other reports filed with the
References:
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CDC Archive.
Future Health of our Nation Infographic. AccessedJuly 12, 2024 . -
NORC at the
University of Chicago . New Research Highlights Just One In Seven Diagnosed Cancers Found By A Recommended Screening Test. AccessedOctober 31, 2024 . Limitations: Based on modeling data derived from numerous sources including self-reported surveys. Includes assumptions on detectability of certain cancer types. Does not include all cancer types or screening methods.
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