Moleculin Biotech, Inc. announced it has received a new independent assessment for the absence of cardiotoxicity in subjects treated with Annamycin. Data from the following subjects were made available to an expert in chemotherapy who is affiliated with a leading cancer research institute in assessing cardiotoxicity. After review of this data, the independent expert concluded that there was no evidence of cardiotoxicity: The first cohort of 3 subjects (190 mg/m2) of its Phase 1B/2 clinical trial evaluating Annamycin in combination with Cytarabine (also known as "Ara-C" and for which the combination of Annamycin and Ara-C is referred to as AnnAraC) for the treatment of subjects with AML as both first line therapy and for subjects who are refractory to or relapsed after induction therapy (MB106).

clinicaltrialsregister.eu: EudraCT 2020-005493-10 or clinicaltrials.gov: NCT05319587; Cohort 4a (360 mg/m2) in the Phase 1B portion of the Company's ongoing U.S. Phase 1B/2 clinical trial evaluating Annamycin for the treatment of soft tissue sarcoma lung metastases (MB-107), comprised of 3 subjects. clinicaltrials.gov: NCT04887298; and 14 subjects in the Phase 2 expansion Recommended Phase 2 Dose (RP2D) (330 mg/m2) of the ongoing U.S. Phase 1B/2 MB-107 clinical trial. This brings the total reviewed by an independent expert to 62 subjects covering 4 separate clinical trials in the U.S. and in Europe.

The data made available included left ventricular ejection fraction (LVEF) as determined by echocardiograms, ECHO strain imaging, and Troponin levels. "ECHO strain imaging" is a method in echocardiography (medical ultrasound) for measuring regional or global deformation (contraction or beating) of the myocardium (heart muscle). By strain rate imaging, the simultaneous function of different regions can be displayed and measured.

Cardiac health biomarkers such as blood Troponin levels are considered an indicator of potential long-term heart damage. Annamycin is the Company's next-generation anthracycline that has been designed to be non-cardiotoxic (unlike currently prescribed anthracyclines) and has been shown in animal models to accumulate in the lungs at up to 30-fold the level of doxorubicin (a commonly prescribed anthracycline), as well as demonstrating the ability to avoid the multidrug resistance mechanisms that typically limit the efficacy of doxorubicin and other currently prescribed anthracyclines. Annamycin is currently in development for the treatment of STS lung metastases (STS lung mets) as well as both first line therapy and therapy for relapsed or refractory acute myeloid leukemia (AML), and the Company believes the drug may have the potential to treat additional indications.