Light Sciences Oncology, Led by CEO on the Go, Prepares for Its Big Day

Llew Keltner flies about 600,000 miles a year. The CEO of Light Sciences Oncology insists he can’t imagine doing his job any other way. There are doctors in about 30 countries testing his company’s experimental drug/device combo treatment in clinical trials of cancer patients. He meets the physicians in person, twice a year, to talk about the product and learn how it’s being used. Then there are always meetings to talk about it with investors and potential partners. He visits the company office only once or twice a quarter, he says.

“How could I go into those meetings with investors if I didn’t do that?” Keltner says. “It’s invaluable experience.”

Still, I was able to book an hour this week to meet the highly-mobile Keltner at his company’s Bellevue, WA headquarters, a week after he raised $40.1 million in venture capital. Most of what’s been written about the company has focused on the “it-failed-to-go-public” angle, yet it turns out Light Sciences Oncology has a much more important news event coming up. After 13 years in business, it will find out in a few months whether the company’s light-infusion technique can actually help cancer patients live longer.

It’s been a long time coming for a company supported for years by Craig Watjen, the treasurer from the early days of Microsoft, and more recently, an array of venture capital firms that includes Essex Woodlands Health Ventures, Johnson & Johnson Development Corporation and Novo A/S. The market they are pursuing initially, liver cancer, affects an estimated 19,000 people in the U.S. each year, although the technology could be able to be applied to many more tumor types than that, Keltner says.

To understand why, some background is required. The company’s product, called Litx, is attempting to become the first treatment of its kind. The system works by using a light-emitting diode, guided by a biopsy needle, which doctors can thread inside a solid tumor with the help of an ultrasound or CT imaging machine. The patient is then injected with an inactive chemical drug called talaporfin sodium. Once the light is turned on, powered by cheap AAA batteries, it activates the drug to kill tumors within a limited wavelength, sparing nearby healthy tissue. The light stays on for almost three hours while the patient can watches TV or reads a magazine, and then goes home.

The company has passed some early clinical trials that show tumor shrinkage, yet has said little about it, Keltner says, because he doesn’t want to raise false hope among patients about a treatment that’s not yet available. Now, he feels he can “loosen up a bit,” because Litx has advanced to the final proving ground, a Phase III trial of liver cancer, which could provide evidence needed to bring the product to market.

The company began recruiting 200 patients for the test of LitX against liver cancer in November 2006. It chose that disease because

Author: Luke Timmerman

Luke is an award-winning journalist specializing in life sciences. He has served as national biotechnology editor for Xconomy and national biotechnology reporter for Bloomberg News. Luke got started covering life sciences at The Seattle Times, where he was the lead reporter on an investigation of doctors who leaked confidential information about clinical trials to investors. The story won the Scripps Howard National Journalism Award and several other national prizes. Luke holds a bachelor’s degree in journalism from the University of Wisconsin-Madison, and during the 2005-2006 academic year, he was a Knight Science Journalism Fellow at MIT.