Unlock stock picks and a broker-level newsfeed that powers Wall Street.
Mainz Biomed’s ColoFuture Study, Evaluating its Novel mRNA Biomarkers, Reports Groundbreaking Topline Results Demonstrating Sensitivity for Colorectal Cancer of 94% with Specificity of 97% and Advanced Adenoma Sensitivity of 81%

In This Article:

Mainz BioMed NV
Mainz BioMed NV

Multiple novel mRNA biomarkers identified for potential integration into pivotal FDA PMA clinical trial (ReconAAsense)

BERKELEY, Calif. and MAINZ, Germany, Sept. 13, 2023 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) -- Mainz Biomed N.V. (NASDAQ:MYNZ) (“Mainz Biomed” or the “Company”), a molecular genetics diagnostic company specializing in the early detection of cancer, announced today positive topline results from its ColoFuture study. The ColoFuture study is a multi-center international clinical trial assessing the potential to integrate a portfolio of novel gene expression (mRNA) biomarkers into ColoAlert®, the Company’s highly efficacious, and easy-to-use screening test for colorectal cancer (CRC) which is being commercialized across Europe and in select international territories. The results of this groundbreaking study included sensitivity for colorectal cancer of 94% with a specificity of 97% and a sensitivity for advanced adenoma of 81%.

“The data generated from the ColoFuture study exceeded our expectations. As we look forward to publishing and presenting the full dataset at a forthcoming medical conference, we eagerly await the outcome from our eAArly DETECT clinical trial which remains on track to report results in Q4 of this year,” commented Guido Baechler, Chief Executive Officer of Mainz Biomed.

The portfolio of mRNA biomarkers evaluated in the ColoFuture study was acquired from the Université de Sherbrooke (January 2022) to potentially enhance ColoAlert®’s technical profile to further extend its capability to include the identification of advanced adenomas (AA), a type of pre-cancerous polyp often attributed to CRC, and to increase the diagnostic sensitivity and specificity rates for CRC. In Sherbrooke’s pioneering work, researchers tested a battery of novel transcriptional mRNA biomarkers using samples obtained from patients diagnosed with CRC or as having an advanced adenoma and identified a subset of mRNA biomarkers that provided the greatest sensitivity and specificity of detection (Herring et al. 2021). Mainz Biomed specifically selected those mRNA biomarkers which demonstrated not just the ability to detect a disease signal from samples of patients who were known to have colorectal cancer, but also the unique potential to identify a signal from samples of patients with advanced adenomas. The power to detect lesions in a pre-cancerous stage can change the entire CRC diagnostic landscape. If advanced adenomas are identified early, they are curable. By treating the patient before the polyps can progress to a cancerous stage, CRC can be prevented.