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Moleculin Announces New Pre-Clinical Data for Annamycin Demonstrating Market Expansion Potential Including Treatment for Pancreatic Cancer

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Moleculin Biotech, Inc.
Moleculin Biotech, Inc.

Data presented at the American Association for Cancer Research (AACR) Annual Meeting 2025

Annamycin is potentially a highly versatile drug capable of working synergistically with numerous mechanistically different FDA approved anticancer first line therapies both in vitro and in vivo

HOUSTON, April 29, 2025 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) -- Moleculin Biotech, Inc., (Nasdaq: MBRX) (“Moleculin” or the “Company”), a late-stage pharmaceutical company with a broad portfolio of drug candidates targeting hard-to-treat cancers and viral infections, today announced that an abstract and poster presentation regarding the Company’s next-generation anthracycline, Annamycin, was presented at the American Association for Cancer Research (AACR) Annual Meeting 2025, on April 28, 2025, at the McCormick Place Convention Center in Chicago, IL.

“The case for expanding the potential markets for Annamycin continues to get stronger,” said Walter Klemp, Chairman and CEO of Moleculin. “In an environment where more and more cancer treatment regimens are combinations of two or more drugs, it is encouraging to see that Annamycin appears capable of generating synergistic results with so many commonly used drugs. The latest research continues to support our view that, in addition to hematological malignancies, solid cancers including sarcoma and pancreatic cancer also represent important expansion opportunities for Annamycin. These findings may help expand the clinical use of Annamycin and consequently make our drug candidate even more attractive to prospective future partners. With five previous or current investigator-initiated clinical trials supporting development of our drug candidates, we believe that our next investigator-initiated trials could be Annamycin for the treatment of pancreatic cancer or advance soft tissue sarcomas.”

The study, presented in poster form, was designed to assess the efficacy of Annamycin in combination with approved anticancer agents in order to identify novel potentially highly efficacious clinical applications of Annamycin alone and with a therapeutic partner. Annamycin in its non-liposomal form (free drug; in vitro) and Liposomal Annamycin (L-ANN; in vivo) were tested in combination with selected US Food and Drug Administration (FDA) approved drugs. Usually, the most efficacious drug combinations from the in vitro studies were then tested using well developed in vivo models of leukemia and solid tumors, including sarcoma and pancreatic cancer.

It should be noted that in a separate set of previous experiments, Annamycin activity was tested in vitro, and appeared to be highly active, against drug resistant cell lines, including cells resistant to cytarabine and venetoclax.