Clarient, Inc. (Nasdaq: CLRT), a premier technology and services resource for pathologists, oncologists and the pharmaceutical industry, today announced that data from a new study shows that Clarient's Ovotax™ assay may effectively predict which ovarian cancer patients will respond favorably to taxane therapy and could, therefore, be spared the potential side effects of this rigorous and sometimes toxic chemotherapy agent.
The study was presented yesterday at the national meeting on Women's Cancer of the Society of Gynecologic Oncologists by Janelle Fauci, M.D. of the Department of Obstetrics and Gynecology at the University of Alabama, Birmingham (UAB).
The study, titled "Expression of TLE3 Predicts Response to Taxane Therapy in Ovarian Carcinoma," included 293 carcinoma samples. Ovotax is a single antibody immunohistochemistry test created to detect the expression of TLE3 in an ovarian tumor and thereby indicate whether the patient will respond favorably to taxane therapy.
The study summary and results may be found at http://www.clarientinc.com/Ovotax.
According to the American Cancer Society, ovarian cancer accounts for about 3 percent of all cancer diagnoses in women. It ranks fifth in cancer deaths among women, accounting for more deaths than any other cancer of the female reproductive system. About 21,000 new cases of ovarian cancer are diagnosed each year.
Warner K. Huh, MD, FACOG, FACS, the study's principal investigator, noted that for ovarian cancer patients taxane is an important therapy, which, along with a chemotherapy regimen, can markedly improve a patient's response rate; however, it also carries with it an increased incidence of severe side effects, making it important to identify which patients will most likely benefit from the therapy. Dr Huh is an Associate Professor in the Division of Gynecologic Oncology, Department of Obstetrics and Gynecology at UAB.
Dr. Huh said, "The findings from this study represent another important step towards personalized medicine and care in women diagnosed with ovarian cancer. Hopefully, we can use this information to individualize cancer care and break away from a 'one size fits all' mentality. This study contributes significantly to this new paradigm."