Gamma Medica, a breast imaging medical device company, today announced the CE Mark approval allowing for the sale and distribution of the LumaGEM Molecular Breast Imaging (MBI) system within the European Economic Area (EEA).

Gamma Medica is finalizing distribution partners in strategic markets across the EEA.

Breast cancer is the most common cancer affecting women in Europe, with nearly one in 10 women developing breast cancer before the age of 80. Dense breast tissue has been linked to an increased risk of breast cancer and a decrease in mammography sensitivity. These factors impact early detection efforts as both cancer and dense tissue appear white on the mammogram.

The LumaGEM MBI system addresses the critical shortcomings of mammography and other screening modalities in the early detection of breast cancer for the 50 percent of women with dense breast tissue.

The system has been commercially available in the U.S. since obtaining approval by the U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA) in 2011 and is currently in use at leading hospitals and health systems, providing peace of mind to women with dense breast tissue and complicated mammograms.

"Securing the CE Mark for the LumaGEM MBI system represents a major step forward in our commercialization plans to market this technology to benefit women with dense breast tissue in Europe," said Philip M. Croxford, President and CEO of Gamma Medica.
"By offering the best MBI solution to physicians, we are helping them manage their patients’ risk efficiently by providing a highly accurate and cost-efficient secondary breast cancer screening for women with complex mammograms and dense breast tissue."

A recent study conducted by Mayo Clinic, and published in two articles in the American Journal of Roentgenology (AJR) in 2015, determined that the addition of MBI, such as the LumaGEM MBI system, to an annual mammogram screening demonstrated a near 400 percent increase in invasive breast cancer detection rates, 50 percent reduction in biopsiesiv and a subsequent 15 percent lower cost per cancer detected than screening with mammography alone.

The growing awareness of the limitations of mammography screening for women with dense breast tissue and the necessity for an effective adjunct screening technology led to the creation of LumaGEM MBI. Unlike mammography, tomosynthesis, ultrasound and MRI, all of which are anatomical imaging tests, MBI is a functional imaging modality that highlights metabolic activity in the breast and detects tumors not visible on a mammogram due to tissue density.