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OS Therapies Announces Positive Data for OST-HER2 in the Treatment of Unresected Osteosarcoma in Dogs Opening the Potential for Use as Front-Line Therapy in Humans

In This Article:

  • Yet to be published data from clinical study combining OST-HER2 with palliative radiation in dogs with unresected, primary osteosarcoma shows clinical and radiographic arrest of the primary tumor, delayed pulmonary metastases and prolonged overall survival of greater than 500 days in 5 out of 15 dogs.

  • Data from new publication in the journal "Molecular Therapy" show OST-HER2 induces strong innate and cytotoxic immune responses beginning at the 1st dose of 3 dose regimen, that correlate with prevention of metastasis and long-term survival in dogs with resected primary osteosarcoma.

  • Data from the same study show that short-term survivors have defective immune responses to OST-HER2 that improve with the second and third administration, supporting a proposed regimen of recurrent dosing to potentially alter clinical course and repeated use after treatment failure.

NEW YORK, April 10, 2025--(BUSINESS WIRE)--OS Therapies (NYSE-A: OSTX) ("OS Therapies" or "the Company"), a clinical-stage immunotherapy and Antibody Drug Conjugate (ADC) biopharmaceutical company, today announced positive data in the prevention or delay of amputation during the treatment of primary osteosarcoma for OST-HER2 combined palliative radiation in dogs with unresected appendicular osteosarcoma. The treatment led to clinical and radiographic arrest of the primary tumor and prolonged time to metastasis in dogs without surgery or chemotherapy. The data opens the potential for OST-HER2 to be used in frontline therapy in human osteosarcoma prior to initiation of chemotherapy, and potentially reduce the need for chemotherapy altogether, for the purposes of preventing or delaying limb amputation or primary tumor resection surgeries, in addition to the prevention, delay and/or control of lung metastasis.

Additionally, the Company announced the publication of positive data in the journal "Molecular Therapy" entitled "Immunological responses and clinical outcomes in dogs with osteosarcoma receiving standard therapy and a Listeria vaccine expressing HER2" demonstrated the correlation of innate and adaptive immune responses to OST-HER2, with prevention of metastasis and long-term survival benefit when used in the adjuvant setting, following standard of care amputation and chemotherapy.

Treatment with OST-HER2 was found to be safe and well tolerated in both studies. Taken together, the data support the potential of OST-HER2 to achieve progression free survival (PFS) of primary osteosarcoma, prevent or delay or metastatic disease, prolong progression free survival (PFS) in metastatic disease, and significantly improve long term survival in patients with osteosarcoma. The data on the use of OST-HER2 in unresected primary osteosarcoma in dogs is being prepared for peer-reviewed publication.