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Monteris Medical announces new data evaluating NeuroBlate for brain lesions at AANS

Press releases may be edited for formatting or style | April 26, 2017 Operating Room
LOS ANGELES, April 26, 2017 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) -- Monteris Medical today announced new data were presented supporting the use of its NeuroBlate® System for brain lesions at the 2017 American Association of Neurological Surgeons (AANS) Annual Scientific Meeting. The AANS scientific program, taking place from April 22-26, included presentations from three separate Monteris-sponsored studies.

Presenting on Monteris Medical’s LAISE study results, Andrew Sloan, M.D., F.A.C.S., Professor & Vice-Chair, Department of Neurosurgery and Director, Brain Tumor & Neuro-Oncology Center, University Hospitals Cleveland Medical Center, delivered an oral presentation titled “Laser Ablation in Stereotactic Neurosurgery (LAISE): A Multi-Institutional Retrospective Analysis of LITT for Glioma” which described the results of 97 patients whose lesions were ablated with the NeuroBlate System. Of the lesions analyzed, 48 percent were deep-seated, 57.8 percent were considered inoperable, and 1 percent were not suitable for chemotherapy. Also presented by Dr. Sloan and his co-investigators was a poster – recognized among 1,000 submissions with the Third Place Tumor e-Poster Award – titled “Laser Ablation in Stereotactic Neurosurgery (LAISE): A Multi-Institutional Retrospective Analysis of LITT for Brain Metastasis” describing results of 40 patients. These two presentations represent results from patients who had brain lesions ablated from 2011–2015 at nine US centers.

“LITT is a minimally invasive tool used to ablate soft tissue and lesions in the brain that have historically been challenging to access,” said Dr. Sloan. “These encouraging findings from the LAISE study offer preliminary evidence that NeuroBlate may be a viable solution in individuals whose tumors were previously considered inoperable.”

A separate prospective study, titled “Laser Ablation After Stereotactic Radiosurgery (LAASR) – Results of a Multi-Centered Prospective Study Stratified by Pathology,” examined the use of laser ablation on patients’ progressive brain lesions following prior stereotactic radiosurgery. Among 42 individuals receiving laser ablation between October 2012 and December 2015, 19 had biopsy-confirmed radiation necrosis, 20 had recurrent tumors and 3 had no biopsy.

“Approximately 15 percent of patients with brain metastases initially treated with stereotactic radiosurgery will have clinically significant tumor regrowth or radiation necrosis within 18 months, which can ultimately lead to neurological deterioration,” said Veronica L. Chiang, M.D., Associate Professor of Neurosurgery and of Therapeutic Radiology, Yale School of Medicine; Director of Stereotactic Radiosurgery and Medical Director, Gamma Knife Center at Yale New Haven Hospital. “The findings of the LAASR study suggest that LITT has utility on these types of lesions and should be considered for appropriate patients.”

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