Kintara Therapeutics to Present at the 2nd Annual Glioblastoma Drug Development Summit

On December 3, 2020 Kintara Therapeutics, Inc. (Nasdaq: KTRA) ("Kintara" or the "Company"), a biopharmaceutical company focused on the development of new solid tumor cancer therapies, reported it will be presenting at the 2nd Annual Glioblastoma Drug Development Virtual Summit on Thursday, December 10, 2020 at 11:45 A.M. EST (Press release, Kintara Therapeutics, DEC 3, 2020, View Source [SID1234572138]).

Schedule your 30 min Free 1stOncology Demo!
Discover why more than 1,500 members use 1stOncology™ to excel in:

Early/Late Stage Pipeline Development - Target Scouting - Clinical Biomarkers - Indication Selection & Expansion - BD&L Contacts - Conference Reports - Combinatorial Drug Settings - Companion Diagnostics - Drug Repositioning - First-in-class Analysis - Competitive Analysis - Deals & Licensing

                  Schedule Your 30 min Free Demo!

Dr. John de Groot, Professor, Department of Neuro-Oncology, MD Anderson Cancer Center, and Dr. James Perry, Professor of Neurology, at the University of Toronto Temerty Sunnybrook Research Institute will present a talk titled "Kintara’s VAL-083: A First-in-Class Bifunctional Alkylating Agent with Promising Activity in MGMT Promoter- Unmethylated & Methylated Glioblastoma."

Drs. de Groot and Perry are the Principal Investigators of Kintara’s arm of the Global Coalition for Adaptive Research (GCAR) Glioblastoma Adaptive Global Innovative Learning Environment (GBM AGILE) study.

ABOUT GLOBAL COALITION FOR ADAPTIVE RESEARCH

GCAR is a 501(c)(3) nonprofit organization uniting physicians, clinical researchers, advocacy and philanthropic organizations, biopharma, health authorities, and other key stakeholders in healthcare to expedite the discovery and development of treatments for patients with rare and deadly diseases by serving as sponsor of innovative and complex trials including master protocols and platform trials. GCAR is the sponsor of GBM AGILE, an adaptive platform trial for patients with GBM – the most common and deadliest of malignant primary brain tumors.