Delcath Systems Announces Presentation of New Data on Percutaneous Hepatic Perfusion with Melphalan in Liver-Dominant Metastatic Breast Cancer at ESMO Breast Cancer 2026
Presentation details
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Congress :ESMO Breast Cancer Congress 2026 -
Date:
May 7, 2026 - Session: 13:15 (local congress time)
- Format: E-poster
- Title: Safety and Feasibility of Percutaneous Hepatic Perfusion with Melphalan in Patients with Liver-Dominant Metastatic Breast Cancer
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Presenter:
Cornelia Lieselotte Angelika Dewald , MD (Hannover Medical School ) - Abstract number: 574eP
Background
Liver-dominant metastatic breast cancer remains a significant clinical challenge, as progression in the liver can be a major driver of morbidity and may limit the effectiveness of systemic therapies. M-PHP is a liver-directed procedure designed to deliver high-dose melphalan to the liver while reducing systemic exposure through extracorporeal hemofiltration.
About the analysis
Independent investigators at three European centers retrospectively identified 15 patients with liver-dominant metastatic breast cancer treated with M-PHP (CHEMOSAT) at three European centers. The analysis evaluated feasibility, safety, and tumor response per RECIST v1.1.
Key findings (retrospective cohort; N=15)
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Patient population: Fifteen patients were treated between
September 2015 andMay 2024 after a median of 4 prior systemic therapy lines (range 1–6). - Treatment delivery: Patients received a median of 1 M-PHP cycle (range 1–7), typically followed by ICU admission of 1–2 days.
- Safety: 67% of patients required blood transfusions (primarily packed red blood cells). Intra-/peri-procedural adverse events occurred in 60% of patients (primarily hematologic or hemodynamic). Grade 3–4 post-procedure adverse events occurred in 80% of patients, predominantly bone marrow suppression with neutropenic-related infections; events typically onset early (median 1 day) and resolved in a median of 7 days.
- Liver response: Hepatic partial response was observed in 9 of 15 treated patients (60%); 3 patients were not evaluable for response.
- Overall survival: Median overall survival from first M-PHP was 6.0 months (95% CI, 2.9–NR; range 0.1–76.5); 33% (5/15) of patients were alive at last follow-up. Median follow-up was 55.6 months (95% CI, 53.7–NR).
“These data from independent European investigators represent real-world evidence supporting the use of HEPZATO KIT and CHEMOSAT in liver-dominant metastatic breast cancer and underscore the need for further evaluation in this heavily pretreated population,” said
HEPZATO KIT is currently being evaluated in a randomized Phase 2 trial in metastatic breast cancer patients with liver dominant disease (PHP-MBC-202; ClinicalTrials.gov identifier NCT06875128).
About
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HEPZATO KIT is approved in
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