HAYWARD, California, June 26, 20223 – RefleXion Medical, Inc., a therapeutic oncology company, today announced that results of a prospective investigator-initiated clinical imaging study conducted on its X1 platform by City of Hope using positron emission tomography (PET) were presented on June 24 during an oral session at the Society of Nuclear Medicine and Medical Imaging (SNMMI) annual meeting in Chicago. The study results serve as the foundation for evaluating the use of RefleXion’s SCINTIX™ biology-guided radiotherapy with a prostate-specific PET radiotracer for controlling external-beam radiotherapy delivery to prostate cancer tumor targets. City of Hope, one of the largest cancer research and treatment organizations in the U.S., is among the first in the nation to adopt this new radiotherapy technology that has the potential to change the way metastatic cancer patients are treated.
Recently cleared by the U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA), SCINTIX technology is the first and only cancer therapy that uses each cancer’s unique biology to autonomously determine where to deliver radiotherapy, second-by-second, during the actual cancer treatment to indicated solid tumors of any stage. SCINTIX therapy uses signals produced by a PET radiotracer interacting with cancer cells to control delivery of external-beam radiotherapy to tumor targets.
The prostate-specific PET radiotracer used in the presented study – 18F-DCFPyL (PyL) – binds to prostate-specific membrane antigen (PSMA), a protein that is expressed in significantly elevated amounts by prostate cancer cells. Also recently approved by the FDA for diagnosing and staging prostate cancer, PyL can accurately and precisely pinpoint tumors in both the prostate and in other body areas where the cancer may have spread or metastasized.

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“It is well established that PyL exquisitely detects tumors present in patients with prostate cancer, but targeting and treating those tumors can be challenging using existing radiotherapy approaches. SCINTIX therapy could overcome these barriers, and our study results support continued exploration of leveraging PyL’s precision to expand SCINTIX therapy to patients with prostate cancer.”
“It is well established that PyL exquisitely detects tumors present in patients with prostate cancer, but targeting and treating those tumors can be challenging using existing radiotherapy approaches,” said Jeffrey Wong, M.D., professor of the Department of Radiation Oncology and the Department of Immunology and Theranostics at City of Hope, and principal investigator of the RefleXion-supported PyL imaging study. “SCINTIX therapy could overcome these barriers, and our study results support continued exploration of leveraging PyL’s precision to expand SCINTIX therapy to patients with prostate cancer.”