Breast Cancer Patients who Underwent IceCure's ProSense® Cryoablation in Japan Reported Significantly Higher Satisfaction than Patients who Underwent Standard of Care Surgery

In This Article:

  • Independent study published in Gland Surgery and conducted at Kameda Medical Center in Japan by ProSense® users including Dr. Kizuki Matsumoto and Dr. Eisuke Fukuma

  • Patients who underwent cryoablation compared to breast-conserving therapy (BCT) reported significantly higher satisfaction (71.0±18.6 vs. 56.3±16.5) in the primary outcome with a mean follow-up of 4.2 and 4.0 years, respectively

  • Data support continued move toward de-escalation of breast cancer treatment from BCT (lumpectomy) to nonsurgical options including cryoablation

CAESAREA, Israel, March 10, 2025 /PRNewswire/ -- IceCure Medical Ltd. (NASDAQ: ICCM) ("IceCure", "IceCure Medical" or the "Company"), developer of minimally-invasive cryoablation technology that destroys tumors by freezing as an alternative to surgical tumor removal, today announced the publication of an independent study titled 'Post-treatment patient satisfaction in early-stage breast cancer: Comparison of cryoablation versus breast conservation therapy using BREAST-Q' in the peer reviewed journal Gland Surgery. The study was conducted at the Breast Center, Kameda Medical Center in Kamogawa, Chiba, Japan by the co-authors of the article, Dr. Kizuki Matsumoto, Dr. Yuko Asano, Dr. Hiroki Matsui, and Dr. Eisuke Fukuma. A leading expert and breast surgeon, Dr. Eisuke Fukuma has performed over 600 ProSense® breast cryoablation procedures, has presented on ProSense® and has trained other doctors at medical conferences.

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In Japan, the de-escalation of treatment for breast cancer continues, with breast-conserving therapy ("BCT"), typically defined as standard of care breast surgery or lumpectomy, representing approximately 60% of all breast cancer cases, as novel nonsurgical options have emerged.

"In this study we aimed to evaluate and compare patient satisfaction after BCT and cryoablation. Assessing the patient's health-related quality of life ("HRQOL") holds significant clinical importance and studies examining long-term satisfaction following cryoablation, particularly in Asian patients, are limited," stated Dr. Kizuki Matsumoto. "Because of improved survival outcomes, breast cancer is becoming a chronic disease, making the survivor's quality of life and satisfaction a major focus of treatment. We were pleased with the outcome of the study and believe the use of cryoablation in breast cancer will be more widespread in the future."

IceCure's Chief Executive, Eyal Shamir commented, "We are grateful to the team at Kameda Medical Center for initiating this important study which focuses on women's satisfaction. The data clearly demonstrate that cryoablation resulted in greater quality of life and patient satisfaction than standard of care surgery in this early-stage breast cancer patient population. We believe these results will support our distribution partner, Terumo Corporation, in its application for regulatory approval of ProSense® for breast cancer in Japan."