Bio-Path Holdings Provides Key Clinical Updates

In This Article:

Bio-Path Holdings, Inc.
Bio-Path Holdings, Inc.

First Solid Tumor Patient Treated with Second, Higher Dose in Phase 1/1b BP1001-A Clinical Trial Experienced Tumor Reduction and Continued Stable Disease

Reports Continued Patient Progress from Phase 2 Triple Combination Study of Prexigebersen in Acute Myeloid Leukemia (AML)

HOUSTON, Feb. 13, 2025 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) --  Bio-Path Holdings, Inc., (NASDAQ:BPTH), a biotechnology company leveraging its proprietary DNAbilize® liposomal delivery and antisense technology to develop a portfolio of targeted nucleic acid cancer and obesity drugs, today provides an update from the Company’s ongoing Phase 1/1b clinical trial of BP1001-A in solid tumor patients and reports continued patient progress from the Company’s ongoing Phase 2 triple combination study of prexigebersen in Acute Myeloid Leukemia (AML).

“These continued positive responses mark a significant milestone for Bio-Path as they suggest our DNAbilize® platform technology has the potential to produce multiple drug candidates capable of target-specific protein inhibition for over-expressed, disease-causing gene products,” said Peter H. Nielsen, President and Chief Executive Officer of Bio-Path. “As previously reported in August 2024, we were thrilled to see that our first patient treated with the higher dose (90 mg/m2) in our Phase 1/1b study of BP1001-A who has shown tumor regression and stable disease continued successful treatment through a tenth treatment cycle. We believe this is significant, particularly considering the heavily pretreated and fragile patient population involved.”

“This elderly female patient with gynecologic cancer had previously been treated with multiple lines of chemotherapy along with multiple surgeries for her disease, and only now is showing positive clinical results with BP1001-A treatment. Importantly, we are not seeing the onerous side effects typically seen in patients with advanced solid tumors being treated with standard chemotherapies,” continued Mr. Nielsen.

“In addition, we previously noted extended treatment durability in two elderly patients in our Phase 2 triple combination study of prexigebersen, venetoclax and decitabine in AML patients. We are pleased to report that each of these patients remain in complete remission after two years of treatment. These ongoing positive outcomes underscore the potential for prexigebersen to treat fragile AML patients for extended periods. We are particularly pleased with these results, as elderly AML patients are typically unable to tolerate intensive chemotherapy and thus experience very poor clinical outcomes,” concluded Mr. Nielsen.