Bicycle Therapeutics Announces Presentation of Additional Human Radiopharmaceutical Imaging Data for MT1-MMP at the American Association for Cancer Research Annual Meeting 2025

In This Article:

Data continue to validate the potential of MT1-MMP as a novel cancer target and further underscore the applicability of Bicycle® Radioconjugates (BRC®) for radiopharmaceutical imaging

Data are representative of 12 patients with various solid tumors imaged with an early BRC molecule targeting MT1-MMP

Initial human imaging data for second BRC molecule targeting EphA2 expected in 2H 2025

Company-sponsored radiopharmaceutical clinical trials planned for 2026

CAMBRIDGE, England & BOSTON, April 29, 2025--(BUSINESS WIRE)--Bicycle Therapeutics plc (NASDAQ: BCYC), a biopharmaceutical company pioneering a new and differentiated class of therapeutics based on its proprietary bicyclic peptide (Bicycle®) technology, announced the presentation of additional human imaging data that validate the potential of MT1-MMP, a tumor antigen overexpressed in many cancers, as a novel target for cancer treatment and demonstrate the positive properties of Bicycle® Radioconjugates (BRC®) for radiopharmaceutical imaging. The data will be presented today during a poster session at the American Association for Cancer Research (AACR) Annual Meeting 2025 in Chicago.

"The additional imaging data using an early BRC molecule continue to validate the potential of MT1-MMP as a novel cancer target, demonstrate the translatability of our preclinical data and position our technology for use as potential radiopharmaceutical therapies," said Michael Skynner, Ph.D., chief technology officer of Bicycle Therapeutics. "The new imaging data from the second patient with breast and bladder cancer presented today build on what was previously demonstrated in the first patient with advanced lung cancer, and we are encouraged that these data represent what we have seen so far in 12 patients with various solid tumors. We continue to advance our radiopharmaceuticals pipeline and look forward to sharing additional updates in the future, including initial human imaging data for our second target EphA2 later this year and the start of our first company-sponsored clinical radiopharmaceutical trials next year."

AACR 2025 Data Highlights

The German Cancer Consortium (DKTK), part of a cooperative network with the German Cancer Research Center (DKFZ), will present human imaging data conducted with an early BRC molecule targeting MT1-MMP. Imaging was performed in a 65-year-old male diagnosed with advanced pulmonary adenocarcinoma, the most common type of non-small cell lung cancer, and an 84-year-old female diagnosed with invasive ductal breast cancer and high-grade urothelial (bladder) cancer.