FluoGuide A/S announced the successful completion of patient enrollment and treatment in the phase l/lla trial with FG001 in patients with aggressive brain cancer. This means the trial is on track to read out topline results in 2-3 months from now. FG001 is a fluorophore targeting uPAR, which is a cancer specific target expressed extensively in most solid cancers.

The fluorophore has the same spectral specifications as indocyanine green, which is already approved, and this means FG001 can be used on current imaging equipment without adaptation. It is administered into a patient's vein prior to surgery and lights up the cancer during surgery, helping to guide the surgeon in removing all cancer while sparing healthy tissue. The controlled, randomized, multi-center phase llb trial (FG001-CT-001) investigates the effect of FG001 in guiding surgery of patients with aggressive brain cancer and compares FG001's effect compared to 5-ALA and white light.

The patients are randomized in 1:1 between FG001 and 5-ALA. FG001 and 5-AL A are compared to white light in their respective arm with the patients as their own control. The trial was based on the highly promising results from a phase l/lla trial in the same indication, where 100% of the biopsies from patients treated with FG001 illuminated cancer.

With recruitment completed, the topline results of the phase IIb trial are expected in 2-3 months and will be conducted with analysis of biopsies and MRI scans. These analyses are blinded and initiated after last patient is enrolled and treated. The main aim of this phase IIb trial is to generate the required data to inform design of a phase III trial of FG001 in aggressive brain cancer, and it is not powered to demonstrate significant superiority or non-inferiority of any of FG001, white light or 5-ALA.FG001 has several technological advantages over 5-ALA, such as being based on near infrared light which gives deeper visibility (1-2 cm versus 1-2 mm) and hence an anticipated higher chance of detecting cancer which is located deeper in tissue.

Patients included in the trial were diagnosed with suspected high-grade glioma where the surgeon expected to be able to make a complete removal of the tumor. The 24 patients were equally randomized between FG001 and 5- ALA. The primary endpoint is the proportion of patients who benefit from the imaging agent, measured by removal of more of the cancer at the end of surgery.