TriSalus Announces Journal of Vascular and Interventional Radiology Publication of Data that Demonstrate Improved Therapeutic Delivery of Glass Microspheres to Solid Tumors With PEDD™ Method via the TriNav® Infusion System

In This Article:

Pressure enabled drug deliver (PEDD) method significantly increased penetration of glass microspheres into porcine liver tumors (117%; p=0.004 and 39%; p=0.032) with lobar infusions and selective infusions, respectively

DENVER, September 23, 2024--(BUSINESS WIRE)--TriSalus Life Sciences®, Inc. ("TriSalus" or the "Company") (Nasdaq: TLSI), an oncology company integrating its novel delivery technology with standard of care therapies and immunotherapy to transform treatment for patients with liver and pancreatic tumors, announced today the publication of research titled, "Intra-arterial Pressure-Enabled Drug Delivery Significantly Increases Penetration of Glass Microspheres in a Porcine Liver Tumor Model," in the peer-reviewed Journal of Vascular and Interventional Radiology. The article illustrates that the PEDD method via the TriNav Infusion System significantly improved delivery of glass microspheres (GM) with deeper penetration into liver tumors and the peritumoral tissue, when compared to delivery of GM with a conventional microcatheter in a transgenic (oncopig) model.

"This is another example of how our PEDD approach effectively tackles a significant challenge in cancer care by ensuring the selective and increased delivery of therapeutics to the tumor. This research advances and validates our understanding of the PEDD method, providing high-resolution evidence of enhanced delivery," said Bryan F. Cox, Ph.D., Chief of Research for TriSalus. "With both proximal and distal placements of the PEDD device, we observed significantly improved delivery of glass microspheres to the tumor, quantified on a millimeter scale. The strength of the proximal infusion data suggests an opportunity to selectively target multiple tumors simultaneously in patients with heavy disease burdens."

"These results contribute to the substantial and expanding body of pre-clinical and clinical evidence supporting the wide-ranging potential applicability of the PEDD approach," said Mary Szela, Chief Executive Officer and President of TriSalus. "Efficient delivery of therapeutics into tumor cells without causing harm to off-target normal tissue remains a real-world challenge in cancer care, and the PEDD approach aims to overcome this obstacle. This publication strengthens our current understanding that, regardless of placement of the technology, either lobar or selective infusions, the PEDD method increased glass microspheres delivery uptake compared to conventional microcatheters. The TriNav device signifies a potential breakthrough in delivering glass microspheres and other drugs into tumors in a highly controlled and targeted manner."