Latest news with #ProteomicsInternationalLaboratories

The Age
a day ago
- Health
- The Age
Milestone first patent for Proteomics simple endometriosis test
In a milestone moment, ASX-listed diagnostics innovator Proteomics International Laboratories has achieved its first patent globally in Japan for its simple 'traffic light' diagnostic blood test for endometriosis. The decision will protect the company's intellectual property rights for its PromarkerEndo technology in the world's fourth-largest healthcare market until March 16, 2041. Proteomics says Japan's healthcare sector already widely uses in vitro diagnostics and precision medicine technologies to customise treatments for patients and help deliver better patient outcomes. The company is planning to start an international commercial roll-out of the device within months using its existing direct-to-consumer channels, while also tapping into general practitioners and women's health specialists. 'This is a significant achievement because it validates the novelty of PromarkerEndo, our world-first blood test for endometriosis.' Proteomics International managing director Dr Richard Lipscombe Proteomics International managing director Dr Richard Lipscombe said: 'Securing patent protection for our diagnostic technology in this region is a key step in our global commercialisation pathway and provides a strong foundation for potential partnerships, licensing, and regulatory advancement.' PromarkerEndo promises to revolutionise women's reproductive healthcare by delivering the first clinically viable, real-world, non-invasive diagnostic test for a disease affecting one in nine women and girls. Estimates suggest endometriosis costs the Australian economy nearly $10 billion annually. Its symptoms can be devastating for women, but it has historically been difficult to diagnose. It can take up to seven years on average for women to be diagnosed with endometriosis, using painful and invasive laparoscopy and tissue biopsies, performed under anaesthetics. For the first time, doctors may instead be able to turn to PromarkerEndo as a frontline tool in detecting endometriosis in symptomatic patients. The device uses a universal 'traffic light' risk score - low, moderate or high - to indicate a patient's likelihood of having the disease.

Sydney Morning Herald
a day ago
- Health
- Sydney Morning Herald
Milestone first patent for Proteomics simple endometriosis test
In a milestone moment, ASX-listed diagnostics innovator Proteomics International Laboratories has achieved its first patent globally in Japan for its simple 'traffic light' diagnostic blood test for endometriosis. The decision will protect the company's intellectual property rights for its PromarkerEndo technology in the world's fourth-largest healthcare market until March 16, 2041. Proteomics says Japan's healthcare sector already widely uses in vitro diagnostics and precision medicine technologies to customise treatments for patients and help deliver better patient outcomes. The company is planning to start an international commercial roll-out of the device within months using its existing direct-to-consumer channels, while also tapping into general practitioners and women's health specialists. 'This is a significant achievement because it validates the novelty of PromarkerEndo, our world-first blood test for endometriosis.' Proteomics International managing director Dr Richard Lipscombe Proteomics International managing director Dr Richard Lipscombe said: 'Securing patent protection for our diagnostic technology in this region is a key step in our global commercialisation pathway and provides a strong foundation for potential partnerships, licensing, and regulatory advancement.' PromarkerEndo promises to revolutionise women's reproductive healthcare by delivering the first clinically viable, real-world, non-invasive diagnostic test for a disease affecting one in nine women and girls. Estimates suggest endometriosis costs the Australian economy nearly $10 billion annually. Its symptoms can be devastating for women, but it has historically been difficult to diagnose. It can take up to seven years on average for women to be diagnosed with endometriosis, using painful and invasive laparoscopy and tissue biopsies, performed under anaesthetics. For the first time, doctors may instead be able to turn to PromarkerEndo as a frontline tool in detecting endometriosis in symptomatic patients. The device uses a universal 'traffic light' risk score - low, moderate or high - to indicate a patient's likelihood of having the disease.

The Age
05-06-2025
- Health
- The Age
New Proteomics blood test unlocks better oesophageal cancer detection
Newly published results from ASX-listed diagnostics trailblazer Proteomics International Laboratories have unveiled stunning new clinical findings for its simple PromarkerEso oesophageal cancer blood test, opening the way for the innovative blood test to be commercially released. The test's accuracy was demonstrated in a 259-person study across three patient groups in Australia and the United States. The results were posted overnight in the peer-reviewed journal Proteomes, providing a major academic rubber stamp for the technology. The new findings showed that the test could detect a whopping 91.4 out of 100 patients with the heartburn-related cancer and correctly identify 98.9 per cent of people without it, offering a powerful, non-invasive alternative to costly and uncomfortable endoscopies. Based on the results, PromarkerEso outperforms many tests currently used for screening other types of cancers. For context, the widely used Prostate-Specific Antigen blood test used to diagnose prostate cancer has an Area Under Curve (AUC) measurement of just 0.68, while PromarkerEso hit an exceptional AUC of 0.98. An AUC greater than 0.7 is considered to offer acceptable discrimination, while above 0.9 is considered outstanding. 'The published results represent a major advancement in our mission to transform the lives of people living with chronic acid reflux.' Proteomics International Laboratories managing director Dr Richard Lipscombe Described by the company as a landmark moment in non-invasive diagnostics, PromarkerEso uses a standard blood draw to flag at-risk patients using a traffic light system that grades patients at low, moderate and high risk of developing the cancer. The results are delivered with near-laboratory precision and without the need for specialist procedures. Proteomics says the breakthrough could transform early detection of one of the world's deadliest and most overlooked cancers, which often goes undiagnosed until it's too late. Specifically, the disease targeted by the test is oesophageal adenocarcinoma, which is often caused by chronic heartburn, or acid reflux, and affects up to 20 per cent of people in Western populations. Despite the high incidence, current detection methods rely on invasive endoscopy procedures that are uncomfortable and expensive. In the US, an endoscopy costs about US$2750 (A$4200) per procedure. Even with this rigorous scrutiny, up to 90 per cent of cases go undetected.

Sydney Morning Herald
05-06-2025
- Health
- Sydney Morning Herald
New Proteomics blood test unlocks better oesophageal cancer detection
Newly published results from ASX-listed diagnostics trailblazer Proteomics International Laboratories have unveiled stunning new clinical findings for its simple PromarkerEso oesophageal cancer blood test, opening the way for the innovative blood test to be commercially released. The test's accuracy was demonstrated in a 259-person study across three patient groups in Australia and the United States. The results were posted overnight in the peer-reviewed journal Proteomes, providing a major academic rubber stamp for the technology. The new findings showed that the test could detect a whopping 91.4 out of 100 patients with the heartburn-related cancer and correctly identify 98.9 per cent of people without it, offering a powerful, non-invasive alternative to costly and uncomfortable endoscopies. Based on the results, PromarkerEso outperforms many tests currently used for screening other types of cancers. For context, the widely used Prostate-Specific Antigen blood test used to diagnose prostate cancer has an Area Under Curve (AUC) measurement of just 0.68, while PromarkerEso hit an exceptional AUC of 0.98. An AUC greater than 0.7 is considered to offer acceptable discrimination, while above 0.9 is considered outstanding. 'The published results represent a major advancement in our mission to transform the lives of people living with chronic acid reflux.' Proteomics International Laboratories managing director Dr Richard Lipscombe Described by the company as a landmark moment in non-invasive diagnostics, PromarkerEso uses a standard blood draw to flag at-risk patients using a traffic light system that grades patients at low, moderate and high risk of developing the cancer. The results are delivered with near-laboratory precision and without the need for specialist procedures. Proteomics says the breakthrough could transform early detection of one of the world's deadliest and most overlooked cancers, which often goes undiagnosed until it's too late. Specifically, the disease targeted by the test is oesophageal adenocarcinoma, which is often caused by chronic heartburn, or acid reflux, and affects up to 20 per cent of people in Western populations. Despite the high incidence, current detection methods rely on invasive endoscopy procedures that are uncomfortable and expensive. In the US, an endoscopy costs about US$2750 (A$4200) per procedure. Even with this rigorous scrutiny, up to 90 per cent of cases go undetected.

Sydney Morning Herald
26-05-2025
- Health
- Sydney Morning Herald
Proteomics on fast track to deliver simple endometriosis blood test
ASX-listed diagnostics innovator Proteomics International Laboratories plans to start a commercial roll-out of its groundbreaking, simple 'traffic light' diagnostic blood test for endometriosis within months, in the process revolutionising healthcare for the disease. The company says its latest trial of its PromarkerEndo test has put it on a fast track to deliver the first clinically viable, real-world, non-invasive diagnostic test for a disease affecting one in nine women and girls and costing the Australian economy nearly $10 billion. Over the weekend, Proteomics released the results of its latest trial, involving 704 blood plasma samples, to leading medical specialists and researchers at the prestigious World Congress on Endometriosis in Sydney. The trial used a diagnostic test consolidated from earlier prototype models to compare cases of endometriosis with general population controls and symptomatic patients. Proteomics said the trial delivered stunning accuracy in diagnosing cases across all stages of the debilitating disease. 'This is a major step forward in making non-invasive endometriosis diagnosis a reality.' Proteomics International Laboratories managing director Dr Richard Lipscombe In a sector where a diagnosis has traditionally taken an average of seven years and involved a painful and invasive laparoscopy and tissue biopsy, this simple blood test is poised to flip the script entirely. For the first time, doctors may soon swap the scalpel for a simple fingerprick blood test, with PromarkerEndo positioned to become the frontline tool in detecting endometriosis in symptomatic patients. PromarkerEndo uses a universal 'traffic light' risk score - low, moderate or high - to indicate a patient's likelihood of having endometriosis. In validation trials, the test clocked an overall accuracy score of 0.92 and reached up to 98 per cent sensitivity in severe cases. It has a robust stage one accuracy performance of 89 per cent in early-stage disease, which is often the hardest to detect. Proteomics International Laboratories managing director Dr Richard Lipscombe said: 'This is a major step forward in making non-invasive endometriosis diagnosis a reality. The advances support our commercialisation strategy and reinforce the potential for PromarkerEndo to become a standard part of the clinical diagnostic pathway.'