OEM News

Tensive Reports Positive Top-Line Trial Results for its REGENERA Bioresorbable Device 

First regulatory approvals in the EU are expected early next year.

By: Michael Barbella

Managing Editor

Tensive S.r.l is touting study results confirming the strong safety profile and growing performance benefits of the REGENERA/SOFTAG bioresorbable scaffolds for breast reconstruction and tissue marking. The pivotal is trial evaluating the REGENERA implant in patients undergoing lumpectomy to treat malignant lesions.

The new data underscore the minimally invasive device’s potential to allow the body to reconstruct its own breast tissue. REGENERA is being developed to offer a natural, permanent, and safe solution to the 1.6 million women annually who do not receive breast reconstruction after lumpectomy due to the lack of viable options.

“Six-month follow-up represents a critical milestone in this patient population in the context of adjuvant cancer therapy,” said Manuela Roncella, M.D., breast surgeon at the Breast Surgery Unit, Ospedale Santa Chiara, and the trial’s lead investigator. “In routine clinical practice, surgeons have limited options for volume replacement following lumpectomy. What we are seeing at six months is particularly encouraging: the scaffold shows consistent and robust behavior in situ and does not interfere with imaging, alongside strong qualitative feedback from both surgeons and patients. Together with follow-up data extending to 12 months in a subset of patients, these observations support the potential of this approach in the post-cancer breast reconstruction setting.”

REGENERA achieved the primary safety endpoint, demonstrating a strong safety profile at the three and six-month follow-up. Secondary performance findings showed consistent scaffold behavior in situ in an interim analysis of Tensive’s ongoing pivotal trial on 94 patients based on six-month follow-up in 90 patients and on 12-month follow-up in 25 patients receiving adjuvant therapy (radiotherapy, chemotherapy, and/or targeted therapy).

In the study, REGENERA was safe, biocompatible, and feasible for volume replacement in breast-conserving surgery in all eligible patients. Furthermore, REGENERA provided high satisfaction, favorable aesthetics, and did not compromise radiotherapy delivery or follow-up imaging during the post-surgical or adjuvant treatment period, investigators concluded. The results are consistent with previously reported interim and longer-term clinical follow-up data from this and earlier studies.

Moreover, a sub-study in 15 patients showed use of the scaffold for imaging in identifying the tumor bed was supportive for accurate delivery of adjuvant radiotherapy.

“These positive top-line results from our pivotal trial continue to demonstrate the transformational potential of REGENERA. This adds momentum to our progress in bringing the device to market for patients with breast cancer in Europe and the U.S.,” Tensive CEO Sanjay Kakkar, M.D., stated. “We are working toward first regulatory approvals in early 2027, so that we can improve clinical outcomes and preserve the quality of life for the millions of women who currently have no solution for breast reconstruction after lumpectomy.”

Full results from the pivotal trial, based on the currently available follow-up data, will be submitted for presentation at upcoming scientific conferences and for publication in a peer-reviewed medical journal.

The ongoing multicenter trial completed enrollment last March of 94 patients with malignant lesions who are receiving adjuvant cancer therapy following lumpectomy. Secondary endpoints include surgeon satisfaction, pain, patient satisfaction and quality of life measured using the validated Breast-Q breast cancer patient questionnaire, and interference with imaging. Patients will continue to be followed for five years.

The top line results from the pivotal trial build upon previously published positive results from this trial and an earlier first-in-human trial in 15 women who underwent lumpectomy of non-malignant breast lesions and received the REGENERA bioresorbable implant.1

Follow-up data from the first in human study of the REGENERA device recently published in a peer-reviewed journal2 show continued excellent safety at two years, no interference with imaging, high levels of performance, with an aesthetic score of ‘Excellent’ in 85.7% of patients, and high levels of patients and investigator satisfaction.

Of the 2.1 million lumpectomies annually performed worldwide, 1.6 million are not reconstructed, constituting a sizeable unmet clinical need.3 Despite the psychological impact of breast disfigurement, common cosmetic surgery options are rarely used, as they entail invasive and complex procedures that often fail to achieve the desired outcome due to the irregular sizes and shapes of lumpectomies.

REGENERA/SOFTAG advanced biomaterial is a bioresorbable implant that is inserted in place of the surgically removed tumor during a lumpectomy procedure. The biomaterial used in REGENERA/SOFTAG resembles a sponge with a fine scaffold matrix; it can be rapidly adjusted for size and shape and its placement during the lumpectomy surgery is a one-step, minimally invasive, fast and easy-to-adopt procedure for surgeons. The biomaterial enables the patient’s own healthy tissue to regrow in the area it fills and it is gradually absorbed by the body. The result is breast restoration composed of the patient’s own natural tissue in the patient’s original breast shape. In addition, the implant is clearly differentiated from surrounding tissue on diagnostic imaging, supporting more targeted delivery of radiotherapy and more accurate monitoring for potential recurrence.

Tensive S.r.l. is a clinical-stage advanced biomaterials medical device company developing bioresorbable polymeric scaffolds for breast reconstruction and tissue marking. Tensive’s mission is to improve clinical outcomes and the quality of life for breast cancer patients through accessible, innovative, sustainable solutions.

References
1 Mariniello et al. Breast Cancer 2023. https://doi.org/10.1007/s12282-023-01446-5
2 Mariniello et al. Breast Cancer 2025. https://doi.org/10.1007/s12282-025-01780-w
3 Analysis based on estimates from the International Society of Aesthetic Plastic Surgery (ISAPS), Breast Cancer Research Foundation (BCRF), the American College of Surgeons (ACS), the World Health Organization (WHO) and Global Market Insights.

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