Imagion Biosystems Limited announce that it has qualified for a second grant of $50,000 under the Entrepreneurs' Programme of the Australian Government Department of Industry, Science, Energy and Resources. The company used the first grant in 2021 to support its early preclinical research efforts for prostate cancer detection in collaboration with researchers at Monash University. This second grant will be used to continue that program, and building on the preclinical results that were reported at the World Molecular Imaging Conference in September 2022.

These funds will further advance the MagSense® PSMA imaging agent, in line with the company's recently reported plans to focus on use of Magnetic Resonance Imaging (MRI) for clinical detection of its MagSense® molecular imaging technology. Prostate cancer is the second most common cancer in men with the prostate cancer diagnostics market expected to be worth more than USD 7.0 billion based on growth figures from 2019. While the widespread use of Prostate-Specific Antigen (PSA) testing over the past decades has resulted in a significant increase in the diagnosis and treatment of prostate cancer, PSA screening has come under scrutiny because many men do not benefit from intervention.

This is because PSA screening is an indicator of risk and cannot determine whether the disease is actually present. As a result, many men have a prostate biopsy to confirm if they have prostate cancer, which can result in unpleasant side effects such as incontinence and erectile disfunction. PSMA-PET tracers have recently received regulatory approvals and are beginning to be adopted in areas where PET imaging is available.

However, PET imaging is not universally available, is costly in some countries, and exposes the patient to radioactivity. There is a clear unmet medical need for a prostate cancer diagnostic imaging technology that can be used with more widely available conventional Magnetic Resonance Imaging and which avoids exposing patients to radioactive tracers.