'Highly Accurate': Telix's Phase III ZIRCON Trial for Kidney Cancer Imaging Published in The Lancet Oncology

In This Article:

MELBOURNE, Australia, Sept. 11, 2024 /PRNewswire/ -- Telix Pharmaceuticals Limited (ASX: TLX, Telix, the Company) today announces that primary results from its Phase III ZIRCON[1] trial have been published in The Lancet Oncology, reporting that Telix's first-in-class investigational PET[2] agent, TLX250-CDx (Zircaix?[3], 89Zr-girentuximab), is highly accurate in detecting and characterising clear cell renal cell carcinoma (ccRCC) in patients with indeterminate renal masses (IRMs).

(PRNewsfoto/Telix Pharmaceuticals Limited)
(PRNewsfoto/Telix Pharmaceuticals Limited)

In this peer-reviewed manuscript, Professor Brian Shuch (University of California, Los Angeles, UCLA) and colleagues report results from this prospective, open-label, multicentre, Phase III trial in which 300 patients with an IRM ≤7cm (cT1) received TLX250-CDx. Authors conclude that TLX250-CDx "has a favourable safety profile and is a highly accurate, non-invasive imaging modality for the detection and characterisation of ccRCC, which has the potential to be practice changing."

Authors explain that small masses in the kidney are increasingly being detected incidentally when patients undergo abdominal imaging, often for other health conditions, contributing to "an era of gross overtreatment". Diagnosis and treatment are limited by current imaging techniques, and renal mass biopsy is invasive, which can often lead to complications. Up to 30% of patients undergo unnecessary surgery, removing masses that are later determined to be benign[4]. If confirmed, however, ccRCC is the most common and aggressive form of kidney cancer, and delays in diagnosis can significantly reduce survival rates.

Professor Brian Shuch, MD, Director of the Kidney Cancer Program and the Alvin & Carrie Meinhardt Endowed Chair in Kidney Cancer Research at UCLA Institute of Urologic Oncology, and a ZIRCON principal investigator, said, "Until now, assessing whether renal masses are cancerous has been difficult and often involves invasive surgery or percutaneous biopsy. This is because standard imaging technology – either a CT or MRI scan – cannot reliably differentiate between benign or malignant renal lesions or provide information about disease biology.

"The challenges and uncertainty in diagnosing ccRCC underscore a critical unmet need for a new, non-invasive technique that accurately detects and differentiates ccRCC from other renal masses in patients, to inform clinical decision making. The ZIRCON trial has shown that TLX250-CDx is a breakthrough technology that can address this need."

TLX250-CDx is a zirconium-89 (89Zr) radiolabelled monoclonal antibody that targets carbonic anhydrase IX (CAIX), a tumour-associated antigen highly expressed in ccRCC. Following successful Phase I and II trials to establish safety and preliminary efficacy, the ZIRCON trial was designed to assess sensitivity and specificity of TLX250-CDx PET/CT imaging to non-invasively detect ccRCC in patients with cT1 IRMs (≤7 cm in diameter) who underwent nephrectomy, using central histological confirmation as standard of truth.