The Lophius solution is suitable for infection detection in diverse patient subpopulations, also including extrapulmonary and sputum smear-negative TB cases. Using this solution, more than 95% of patients with active tuberculosis disease were correctly classified as infected in the Lophius study. In this regard, the assay clearly outperformed an Interferon Gamma Release Assay, which Lophius used as a benchmark. In addition, the Lophius solution has shown the potential to complement PCR tests for direct pathogen detection by correctly classifying active TB cases previously missed by PCR analysis. Overall, the Lophius TB infection detection assay has shown the potential to close the performance gap for identification of active TB subjects described in literature.
“We are very pleased with the interim results of our study, which shows that we are on track with our program for a truly next-generation tuberculosis infection detection test. We expect that our blood-based assay will set a new standard for the early detection of a TB infection to improve patient management and save healthcare costs,” commented Dr. Bernd Merkl, CEO of Lophius Biosciences. “These initial results combined with Lophius’ expertise and network also provide a solid basis to tackle the even bigger hurdle for a breakthrough solution: The ability to consistently differentiate between latent tuberculosis and treatment-requiring active TB.”