The company said on Wednesday that its Elecsys GALAD score, which
combines factors including age, gender and biomarker results to more
quickly and accurately diagnose early stage hepatocellular carcinoma
(HCC), was awarded U.S. Food and Drug Administration's (FDA)
Breakthrough Device Designation.
"The combination of blood-based biomarkers with clinical algorithms
has the potential to significantly reduce mortality of HCC patients
as they can receive a more timely diagnosis and treatment," said
Roche Diagnostics head Thomas Schinecker.
Roche is targeting HCC, the most common type of liver cancer and a
big killer of people particularly in Asia and Africa, with a
cocktail of Tecentriq and its older drug Avastin that has been
submitted for FDA approval.
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Some 750,000 people globally are diagnosed with HCC annually, in particular in
countries hit hard by chronic hepatitis B or where a cancer-causing mould called
aflatoxin contaminates food such as rice, Roche said. Almost half of HCC cases
are in China, one of the company's fastest growing markets.
The FDA Breakthrough Devices Program was created in 2018 to speed the
development and prioritize review of technologies that may help treat or
diagnose devastating diseases or conditions better than existing products.
(Reporting by John Miller, editing by John Revill)
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