Intera Oncology Relaunches Hepatic Artery Infusion Pump

Patient demand and self-referrals have been a key driver of adoption for the Intera 3000 HAI pump.

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Intera Oncology

Intera Oncology has reintroduced Hepatic Artery Infusion (HAI) therapy to the market after its discontinuation in 2018 by the prior manufacturer dismayed patients and physicians. Hepatic Artery Infusion therapy is giving people with colorectal cancer that has spread to the liver and those with bile duct cancer confined to the liver new hope by delivering local chemotherapy directly to tumors while minimizing side effects elsewhere in the body.

Intera Oncology was founded by Jonathan Reis, M.D. and David Dove, M.D. who learned of the pump’s discontinuation from a New York Times article published five years ago. Drs. Reis and Dove had both been impressed with the clinical research supporting HAI therapy and had personally seen the benefits of the treatment on their friends and loved ones. Together, they made a commitment to building an entire company with an exclusive focus on bringing the pump back to market to ensure HAI therapy’s availability for all patients who need it.

For patients with colorectal cancer that has spread to the liver and those with bile duct cancer confined to the liver, HAI therapy has been shown in multiple independent clinical studies to improve survival and help prevent the recurrence of tumors. After Intera Oncology received FDA approval to manufacture the pump in 2021, the medical community quickly rallied in support of the pump’s return with nearly 50 cancer centers across the U.S.— including nine of the U.S. News & World Report’s top 10 in the nation—now offering HAI therapy to a growing number of patients.

Patient demand and self-referrals have been a key driver of adoption for the Intera 3000 HAI pump which fits in the palm of a hand and is surgically implanted into the abdomen wall. The pump is designed to deliver a continuous flow of chemotherapy directly to the hepatic artery that feeds metastatic tumors in the liver. This direct delivery mechanism allows for delivering 400 times the concentration of the drug into the tumors in the liver compared to standard IV administration. Patients who receive HAI therapy continue their normal daily activities outside of a hospital with minimal disruption to their lives.

One such patient, Marsha Semon, today a 48-year-old mother of two, received HAI therapy in 2017 and was able to keep up with her third-grader and kindergartener while getting treatment. Six years later, she is an advocate that encourages other colorectal cancer patients to consider the HAI pump to treat liver metastases.

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