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Galera Therapeutics completes acquisition of Nova Pharmaceuticals

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Galera Therapeutics
Galera Therapeutics

Galera’s development strategy shifts from toxicity reduction to anti-cancer therapeutics, with three trials in patients with highly resistant subsets of advanced breast cancer.

Lead program is Phase 1/2 trial of Nova Pharmaceutical’s Clinical Stage Nitric Oxide Synthase (NOS) Inhibitor on top of standard-of-care nab-paclitaxel and alpelisib in metaplastic breast cancer.

Concurrent financing when added to Galera’s existing cash balance, is anticipated to fund operations through data readout of its lead program and into 2026.

Galera intends to leverage NCI grants, academic partnerships and the I-SPY 2 network for efficient and cost-effective clinical dataset expansion.

MALVERN, Pa., Dec. 31, 2024 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) -- Galera Therapeutics, Inc. (OTC: GRTX) announced today it has completed the acquisition of Nova Pharmaceuticals, Inc. (“Nova”), a privately held biotechnology company advancing a pan-NOS Inhibitor to treat patients with highly resistant forms of breast cancer, including metaplastic breast cancer and other refractory subsets of triple-negative breast cancer (“TNBC”).

In support of the acquisition, a syndicate of investors led by Ikarian Capital has invested approximately $3 million to purchase Galera common stock. Galera’s new lead program is the Investigator-sponsored Phase 1/2 trial of a pan-NOS Inhibitor on top of standard-of-care nab-paclitaxel and alpelisib in metaplastic breast cancer. The Company’s cash balance at closing is anticipated to fund operations into 2026 and through data readout from its lead program in metaplastic breast cancer. A second trial is planned for this agent in TNBC in collaboration with the I-SPY 2 consortium. The Company intends to support a third trial of Avasopasem, one of its small molecule dismutase mimetics, in patients with hormone-receptor positive (HR+) advanced breast cancer who have become resistant to conventional therapy. This trial is expected to commence enrollment in the first half of 2025.

“Dismutase Mimetics and NOS inhibitors involve complementary pathways that play important roles in cancer, in the tumor microenvironment, in resistance to conventional chemoradiotherapy and in immuno-oncology,” said Mel Sorensen, M.D., President & CEO of Galera. “Substantial mechanistic and preclinical rationale for both agents in solid tumors, especially in breast cancer, has been generated by the companies and their collaborators. Both product candidates are in clinical stage development, having been well-characterized in many patients both in oncologic and non-oncologic indications. Galera has decided to focus its near-term development on the hardest-to-treat subsets of advanced breast cancer.”