Unlock stock picks and a broker-level newsfeed that powers Wall Street.

Omeros Corporation To Introduce Its Proprietary T-CAT™ Program for the Treatment of Multidrug-Resistant Pathogens in Plenary Session at Upcoming European Congress on Infectious Diseases

In This Article:

-- Targeted Complement Activating Therapy Represents Next-Generation, Broadly Applicable Antimicrobial Therapeutics –

SEATTLE, April 08, 2025--(BUSINESS WIRE)--Omeros Corporation (Nasdaq: OMER) today announced that the first public presentation of its proprietary Targeted Complement Activating TherapyTM (T-CATTM) platform will occur at the European Congress on Infectious Diseases 2025 in Rome, Italy on Monday, April 14. The plenum presentation, titled Augmenting cytotoxicity of pathogen-specific antibodies which initiate complement activation independent of the classical pathway, will be delivered by Prof. Wilhelm Schwaeble, Ph.D., D.Sc., Director of Research DVM at the University of Cambridge and Director of the Omeros-Cambridge Center for Complement and Inflammation Research.

Omeros’ T-CAT platform presents a novel class of pathogen-targeting recombinant antibodies designed for broad applicability against diverse microbial species, including multidrug-resistant organisms (MDROs), without promoting or enhancing the development of drug resistance. The global rise of MDROs – microorganisms, predominantly bacteria, that are resistant to one or more classes of antimicrobial agents – has massive clinical and economic implications. More than 2.8 million antimicrobial-resistant infections occur in the U.S. each year, and more than 35,000 people die as a result.

The mechanism of action of T-CAT recombinant monoclonal antibodies is unique. The heavy chains of each T-CAT antibody construct are engineered to contain an active complement-cleaving enzyme to trigger direct activation of complement on the microbial cell surface, leading to microbial destruction and clearance. Each engineered T-CAT construct is targeted, binding to surface antigens that are highly conserved across multiple microbial serogroups and essential for the targeted microbe’s survival, making each different T-CAT antibody construct lethal for a given microbial species while avoiding significant "off-target" effects. In well-established in vivo animal models considered predictive of efficacy in humans, T-CAT recombinant antibodies clearly demonstrated effectiveness in treating life-threatening infections caused by Gram-negative and Gram-positive bacterial pathogens, specifically Klebsiella pneumoniae, Pseudomonas aeruginosa, Streptococcus pneumoniae and Neisseria meningitidis, three of which have been designated by the World Health Organization as priority bacterial pathogens. Each T-CAT recombinant antibody demonstrated marked clearance of bacteria from blood and lung tissues, resulting in significant reduction of organism-mediated and inflammatory pulmonary injury as well as significantly increased survival compared to animals receiving the corresponding parent conventional antibody.